A little basic math here....
There have been about 30,000 Viper engines built. Total.
Assuming 10% of those people built engines, that's 3000.
Assuming 25% of those engines are Gen-3, that's 750.
Assuming there are roughly 33% NA, 33% SC, and 33% TT, that's roughly 250 of each.
Would you like to venture a guess on how many variations of engine builds are mixed into each of those 250 engines seeing as builders don't share info with each other in such a small market?
Now... lets look at the LS1. They had more LS1's in ONE YEAR of Corvette production than all of the Viper engines combined. That's before factoring all years, the LS1's used on regular production vehicles by the millions, and the variations of the LS1 that can damn near share components.
Should I continue? Or is your foot tasting like chicken? :chain:
Oh wait, not done yet. Check out the port/valve size in Gen-1/2/3 Viper engines compared to the V8's, compare the main journal diameter, and compare the oil system designs. Now tell me that its easier to make power with the extra cubes by themselves. Gen-4 engines aside, the Viper engines were not designed to maximize their cubic inches because revving high enough to do the job was not a design parameter- it takes lots of labor and expensive parts to maximize the use of all that displacement.
Feel free to order up 1000 pistons for a particular application and sell them for peanuts to help your fellow owners out. Let me know how it goes