It is the Ram SRT-10 successor unofficially. It’s too bad it’s not real.
The Ram TRX. It’s a Ram TRX. It’s an off-road muscle truck that can fly through the air, with a Hellcat V8 engine producing 702-horsepower (523 kilowatts) and a Hellcat V8 power plant. What about those who like to stick to the ground? really sticking.
You may have seen a Ram SRT-10, a two-door firebreather that was part of Dodge back when Ram was still available. You may remember the pickup truck with a Viper V10 engine and a six-speed manual transmission. Although the Viper has long since passed, people have been wondering what a modern Ram SRT could look like. The wait is over thanks to @jlord8 (AKA Jim), on Instagram. Anyway, it’s a fictional world.
Graphic designer, John Lovell, loves creating whimsical vehicles that have never been seen before. His latest RAM TRX Street rendering is amazing. This digital makeover showcases two things Ram can’t offer: a street-focused TRX, and a single-cab pickup with two doors. We are nostalgic for the SRT-10 when we see this rig with its aggressive TRX face, hood scoop and wide street tires. Truck buyers today want ruggedness and greater ground clearance for their pickup trucks.
Jim has not stopped thinking of other uses for street trucks. What about a Ramcharger muscle SUV with TRX influences, or a Nissan Titan GT-R.
Jim mentions in the TRX Street post that his Chevrolet Silverado ZL1 rendering inspired more street-truck projects. You know what? This idea is also very popular with us.
It’s ironic that Dodge is credited for launching the full-size street truck market in 1978 with the Lil’ Red Express Truck. In the early 1990s, the first-generation F150 Lightning and the Chevrolet Silverado SS 454 followed. The second-generation Lightning and Dodge Ram SRT-10 arrived in the mid- to late 2000s. It was all over when the F150 SVT Raptor went on sale in 2010. The off-road-focused truck was hilariously more popular than the street-happy Lightning. This forever changed the pickup market.
Jim has allowed us to at least glimpse into the multiverse, where road-going monsters may exist.