America’s only four-door muscle car, the Dodge Charger, has added a Widebody exterior to its high-performance lineup for 2020, and by tweaking its supercharged 6.2-liter HEMI® Hellcat V-8 engine to produce 717hp, the 2020 Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat takes home the honor of being the most powerful and fastest mass-produced sedan in the world. The top-selling American sedan on the market, and America’s only four-door muscle car, the Dodge Charger continues its strong sales in the seventh year of its seventh generation, with a full redesign, expected for 2021.
With seven trim models and four power options from 300hp to 717hp, the 2020 Dodge Charger lineup, adds a new aggressive and modern Widebody exterior, standard on Charger SRT Hellcat and available on Charger Scat Pack, with new front and rear fascias with integrated fender flares, adding 3.5 inches of width over wider wheels and tires. Also for 2020, the Dodge SRT offers a wide variety of newly designed wheels, wheel finishes, new and updated packages and Equipment Groups, new premium interior materials, three new exterior colors and new badges.
Also in 2020, Dodge offers the Daytona 50th Anniversary Edition on the Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Widebody, powered by the supercharged 6.2-liter HEMI® Hellcat V-8 engine with an extra boost of power: 717 horsepower and 650 lb.-ft. of torque. Other new items include cosmetic tweaks -- performance hood, fascia, sculpted side sills, spoiler and high-bolstered seats -- on Charger R/T and Charger GT models.
Drawing design cues from its historic 1969 model, Charger is muscular with a pavement-hugging wide body. My Charger R/T test vehicle was 200.8 inches long, 75.0 inches wide and 57.8 inches high on a 120-inch wheelbase, with a curb weight of about 4286 lbs. and ground clearance of 5.2 inches.
Charger has been a muscle beast since inception, and the 2020 version explodes past the original 1965 Charger’s 230 horses with rocketlike set-ups. The standard Pentastar 3.6-liter V-6 engine is efficient and brawny with 292hp and 260 lbs-ft of torque for an EPA rating of 19/city and 30/hwy for AWD. The optional Super TrackPack upgrade increases the power to 300hp and 264 lbs-ft. My R/T trim test ride was powered by the 5.7-liter HEMI V-8 with a throaty 370 hp and 395 lbs-ft. My power mill was rated at 15mpg/city and 24mpg/highway and my pedal-mashing town, highway and track trials averaged 22.6mpg. The Street & Racing Technology (SRT) Scat Pack and Daytona 392 trims benefit from a 6.4-liter HEMI V-8 that muscles out 485 hp and 475 lbs-ft of torque for a rating of 15/city and 24/hwy and street-legal/track-worthy speed. The SRT Hellcat monsters supercharge their 6.2-liter HEMI for a pro-tracklike 707hp to 717hp and 650 lbs-ft of torque for racing and performance capabilities at an EPA rating of 12/city and 21/hwy.
I would have preferred the muscle control of a manual shift, but my 5.7 HEMI was mated to a responsive TorqueFlite 8-Speed Automatic Transmission. Highway passing at speed is bold, and in track tests, my Charger R/T finished off a hand-timed zero-to-60mph sprint in 5.8 seconds, and completed a quarter-mile in 14.2 seconds.
Charger is wide and low and hugs the road, while the responsive rack and pinion steering with electric power assist displays autocross worthiness. Charger’s independent SLA front suspension with high upper “A” arm, coil spring over gas-charged monotube shock absorbers and stabilizer bar and the rear’s one piece lower-control arms on the AWD models provide stable handling.
The driver-oriented interior is luxury-oriented, outfitted with premium, soft-touch materials, a full-color driver information display gauge cluster, and an instrument panel center stack with the newest Uconnect system. The interior harkens back to the 1960s in room with only 38.6 inches of front headroom and 36.6 in the rear seats – fine if you are under 6-feet tall. Legroom is good for even taller drivers and passengers, at 41.8 inches in row one with 40.1 in row two, and wide-body shoulder room of 59.5 inches in front and 57.9 in the rear.
With seven trims and multiple variations and power options, the 2020 Dodge Charger starts at basing from $27,570 for the Charger SXT and $29,490 for the GT, both with a 300-hp set-up, to $66,520 for the 707hp SRT Hellcat Widebody. My 370-hp test 2020 Charger R/T was third on the trim list, base priced at $34,290.
In F8 Green exterior paint, with a Black Carbon dual hood stripe (for $995), we upgraded the standard Black cloth Performance seats with Nappa/Alcantara Performance seats. The Plus Group added $2695 for a cornucopia of items including 20-Inch x 8.0-inch machined with Granite pocket wheels, automatic adjust in reverse exterior mirrors, blind-spot indicator with memory/power/heat mirrors, blind-spot and cross-path detection, heated front and second-row seats, heated steering wheel, power front driver and passenger seats and more. The Driver Convenience Group for $795, added Blind Spot power heated mirrors, Blind Spot and Cross-Path Detection, Auto-Dimming Mirror and more; and the $995 Navigation and Travel Group with SiriusXM® Traffic Plus and Uconnect® 4CNAV with 8.4-Inch Display. Adding Destination charges of $1495 put the sticker-as-tested at $42,475, but 2020 National Retail Consumer Cash incentives of $3700 cut my price to $38,775, so check your local dealer for available discounts.
You can see five decades of the Dodge Charger on display at the Carlisle Chrysler Nationals, at the Carlisle (PA) Fairgrounds, July 10-12. The largest Mopar event in the world, the event features more than 2,800 vehicles from all eras of the Chrysler brand. View classic, muscle cars and high-performance vehicles including displays showcasing 50 years of the Plymouth Duster, 50 Years of the Superbird, 50 Years of Pro Stock and 50 Years of the AAR ‘Cuda and Challenger T/A. There is also a display of the 25th Anniversary of the Neon, and Thrill Rides in Dodge Hellcats, as well as cars, parts, tools, memorabilia, collectibles and more for sale in the event’s Mopar Automotive Flea Market.
<I> Visit www.CarlisleEvents.com for more on the automotive hobby.
Mike Blake, former editor of KIT CAR magazine, joined Carlisle Events as senior automotive journalist in 2004. He's been a "car guy" since the 1960s and has been writing professionally for about 30 years. </I>