So, here we are splitting hairs....The original statement was that the engine is not a Hellcat...We were not talking about the Vehicle Name, but the name of the engine.
Meanwhile, Fiat used Ferrari engines in the Dino for a while.
Not surprisingly, those cars didn't become Ferraris, but remained Fiats. Similarly, a Ram with a Cummins engine is still a Ram. Dodge, and only Dodge, have Hellcat models.
So, here we are splitting hairs....lol
The original statement in question stated that the engine is not a "Hellcat" engine, but a supercharged 6.2 engine. I never said it was a "Hellcat" named truck, but only that it has a "Hellcat" engine in it. Yes the Hellcat is a 6.2 Supercharged engine also, BUT, I must again state that on top of this motor, (PIC from Ram Website), is the Hellcat Logo and SRT Logo. The motor is in fact named and designated by FCA as the "Hellcat" engine, regardless of what it is used in....Just like the named "Hurricane" engine that is going to be used in several vehicles, none of which are currently named a "Hurricane" vehicle. I,,,, repeat I, never said it is a Hellcat truck, only that the engine is in fact a "Hellcat" named engine; and yes, it is specifically a 6.2 Supercharged engine. The TRX has been adopted by many unofficially, the name "Hellcat TRX", because of this...Just like RAM adopted Tyrannosaurus Rex for the TRX name moniker, even though the original TRX Truck had nothing to do with a dinosaur. Somebody was sitting around drinking a cup of coffee at RAM, like me today, and thought to themselves, wouldn't it be cool to relate the model TRX to a tyrannosaurus rex so it could kill a Raptor? Look how that took off...
Similarly, it's like how Carroll Shelby named the original GT350 because he had to come up with a name for it and was standing by a building and stated that it was about 350 feet from where he was standing....and then followed up with the GT500, which was only named that by him because it had to be a higher number than 350..... lol "Just Saying"