Dodge - All Models
About Dodge
Company History
Dodge is an automotive marque, but its brief, spectacular brush with motorcycling—the Tomahawk concept—left a lasting cultural footprint. Unveiled in the early 2000s, the Tomahawk placed a Viper V10 between dual front and rear wheels (technically four contact patches) in a billet-heavy chassis that looked equal parts sculpture and science fiction. Claimed performance figures and feasibility were hotly debated, but the point was theater: to showcase design bravado, metalcraft, and the intoxicating idea that American excess could be distilled into an open-air projectile. Limited, non-street-legal display pieces were produced, and the image of that blue-and-chrome monolith burned itself into the public imagination. Purists dismiss it as not a ‘proper’ motorcycle; others celebrate it as a dare made manifest—proof that concept vehicles can expand the vocabulary of what’s possible. Historically, the Tomahawk matters because it demonstrated how an auto brand could command the moto conversation for a season with audacity alone, and because it inspired designers and fans to chase wilder geometries, bigger ideas, and bolder material choices. Whether you roll your eyes or grin, you remember it—and that was the assignment.
