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Go on an adventure on a 2017 Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat on the M1 Concourse Racetrack circuit.
Detroit Free Press

No one will reveal how many red keys are in the world.

It's a kind of secret.

But thousandsA lot of people have taken home red keys from their Dodge muscle cars that release more than 700 horses – a power that Silicon Valley's Wired magazine calls "a crazy bats engineering exercise".

Val Saph, 34, of Armada, uses only the red key. His wife, Victoria too.

Loyd Overstreet, 58, of Shreveport, Louisiana, will not let his wife, Stacy, use a red key.

"My wife is only entitled to the black key," he said. "She can not handle all this power."

For the cautious driver, scared driver or teen driver, the black key fob limits driving to just 500 horsepower. (For the context, that's 105 horsepower more than the 2018 Ram 1500 pickup with a Hemi V8, which can carry real horses.)

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Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat 2019. (Photo: FCA US LLC)

Whether it's nurses, financial analysts, or veterans of the military, the men and women driving these crazy vehicles like engines that are so powerful that they can run from 0 to 60 mph in a little over 3 seconds.

These cars "provide an acceleration that will take your breath away," said John McElroy, longtime industry observer and host of "Autoline After Hours". "Most people who have never experienced it will gasp or scream at the rate at which they are accelerating."

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Todd Rogers, 57, of Washington, DC, will not forget what happened after buying his first Hellcat Challenger in January 2015.

"A Virginia soldier approached me." My immediate response when he approached my window was: "It would be better." He said, "I just want to know, does this thing really come with two keys? ""

Rogers replied, "Did you just get me to ask this question?"

In the end, the law enforcement officer was a car enthusiast. In August 2016, Rogers bought a second Hellcat. Then, in March 2018, he took his demon. "I exchange the cars according to my mood, but I never wear the black key – it is a waste of money spent by the manufacturer."

Rogers, a retired Marine who is now director of commercial accounts for a private security company, said he owns a Corvette at 22 in Long Beach, California. He therefore understands that he deserves to hold the attention, but Dodge is in a league of his own.

"When I bought my first Hellcat, I thought I was a celebrity," he said. "People stop in the middle of the street to take pictures, and now people are shouting," Is this a demon? Omigod! A demon! ""

Hugh Mullaney stands with his 2018 Challenger Hellcat Widebody near his home in Edmond, Okla., Jan. 15. The former Navy SEAL said that the powerful car had the impression of "going into battle". (Photo: Hugh Mullaney)

Hugh Mullaney, 45, of Edmond, Oklahoma, is a former Navy SEAL who does not stop talking about his 2018 Challenger Hellcat Widebody.

"I was impressed, I could not believe it," he said. "Basically, you can ride with a race car, I drive it to relax, I've driven it, the red key and the black key make me smile.When I see the red key, I feel like a child at Christmas. "

Mullaney paused. "When you raise the 707 horsepower, you feel that the car is changing attitude, it is getting a little stronger, and you feel like you're going into battle."

And what else is in his garage?

"I have a second car," he said. "It's incomprehensible, it's just not cool."

Contact Phoebe Wall Howard: 313-222-6512or [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter @phoebesaid. Sign up for our Car Newsletter.

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