With 656bhp rather than the 503bhp of its predecessor, Aston Martin's latest Vantage has moved on to a new performance plane. It was a serious sports car before but the comprehensive overhaul has, as with the DB12 we were so impressed by recently, significantly shifted its capabilities. Its price too: this is a £165,000 car before options.
In appearance, it is mildly tweaked, enhanced, more muscly and 30mm wider now, at 1981mm across the body. The chassis, a blend of aluminium extrusions and castings, is a similar architecture to the DB12's, though this car is shorter of wheelbase (2692mm) and overall length (4496mm) because it's a sports car, not a grand tourer. It's Aston's most focused series model, for now, but one might expect a more hardcore variant later. This, though, says Aston's director of vehicle performance, Simon Newton, is a road car rather than a track car.
The chassis is more rigid. Aston makes no claims for overall torsional rigidity but points to where local stiffnesses have been increased: there are new sheer panels front and rear, the front longerons are tied together better, and the front top mounting point brace is both lighter and stiffer and there's one at the rear now too.
Aside from the enhanced 4.0-litre twin-turbocharged V8 engine (see box, p27), hardware includes an eight-speed ZF automatic transmission with a 5%-shorter final drive ("we liked the ratios", says Newton), an electric power steering system with a former NVH coupling in the steering column removed to increase precision, rear-drive via an electronically controlled limited-slip differential, and double-wishbone suspension all around with coil springs and Bilstein adaptive dampers with a hugely wider bandwidth (said to be up 500%), and bespoke Michelin Pilot Sport S5 tyres (275/35 R21 at the front and 325/30 R21 at the rear).
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Poster car that went from rusty to trusty
One evening, two years ago, George Pappas was being driven down his local high street by a mate and mulling over whether to replace his Mk4 Golf diesel, a recent purchase that was boring him to death, when his girlfriend, also in the car, spotted an old BMW 3 Series at the side of the road with a 'for sale' sign in the window.
THE SEVEN-SEATER THAT VOLVO DARE NOT KILL OFF
The current-gen XC90 has been on sale since 2015 for good reason
GENESIS ELECTRIFIED G80
Where the story begins, in the Hyundai premium marque’s luxury saloon
LEXUSLBX
Can you shrink premium quality to fit an SUV this small? We now know
Rolls boss ready to 'define the next chapter'
Nine months into the job, Rolls-Royce CEO and car guy Chris Brownridge tells STEVE CROPLEY what he's learned and where the firm's heading
Once more, with feeling
AC Cars' recreation of the classic MkII Cobra is at first glance a faithful facsimile of a 1960s performance benchmark. SIMON HUCKNALL drives it
MERCEDES-BENZ CLE
Does a PHEV set-up work in a coupé that exudes such old-school vibes?
ANALOGUE SUPERSPORT
Lotus Elise specialist uprates 1990s icon with an eye on track days
ALPINE A290
The hot hatch is alive and well, and living in France. On both road and track, there's much to savour`
UK HANGS ON TO OLD CARS
Average car age climbs as high prices dampen demand for new models