All posts in “Aston Martin”

Aston Martin DBS Superleggera

Coming as a replacement to the Vanquish S and taking the best design cues from the Vantage and DB11, Aston Martin’s DBS Superleggera is a glorious mashup of luxury and outrageous power.

With a body made entirely from extruded aluminum covered, the Superleggera (superlight in Italian) weighs just under 1,700kg (72kg lighter than the DB11) and sports pumped-up, aggressive features including a full-height grille, wider rear haunches, plus a double diffuser & a larger fixed aeroblade at the back.

Powering the handsome monster is a 725hp 5.2L V12 with two turbos, good for a ferociously fast 0-62mph time in 3.4 seconds and a top speed of 211 mph. The massive engine sends power through an eight-speed automatic gearbox to the rear wheels, while 410mm carbon ceramic brakes ensure a swift stop. Inside, bold shapes mix with premium materials such as leather, Alcantara, and chopped carbon fiber accents.

Buy From Aston Martin $305,000

British Brute: Aston Martin DBS Superleggera

A new supercar was released by Aston Martin that will go head-to-head against the Italians. Dubbed the ‘Superleggera’, the super light DBS Superleggera is made out of carbon fiber and aluminium.

It will have a 715 horsepower turbocharged V12 engine, that will easily eat up asphalt in both style and comfort. At over $300,000 the new Aston Martin is no slouch, and has big shoes to fill: it’s replacing the Vanquish S. It’s reported to have an eight-speed automatic transmission, a mechanical limited-slip differential, and torque vectoring. All this technology is adjustable and will give you 0-60 in 3.4 seconds with a top speed of 211mph.

Aston Martin has always been known as a ‘GT’ car so it’s not a full race-spec car. It can still crush the competition, by all means. This tuned British beast will make sure you know that the ol’ chap is back in town.

We personally like that chiselled front and that backend will make you do double-takes. We can’t wait to see this on a track and rip around!

Aston Martin Rapide AMR

As it was to be expected, one of the most powerful sedans on the road will come from iconic British maker of luxury grand tourers and race cars, Aston Martin. Their recently-unveiled Rapide AMR will pack an upgraded 6.0L V12 engine with 580-hp, propelling the sporty vehicle from 0-60 in 4.2 sec, on its way to a top 205 mph.

The Rapide carries its name (“fast” in French) written all over its sexy, aerodynamic body. Lighter and sitting lower than the Rapide S, the new Aston Martin boasts a slew of carbon fiber parts including the aggressive front splitter, side sills, rear diffuser, spoiler, trunk lid, and hood with massive ventilation inserts.

Complete with 21-inch wheels with carbon-ceramic disc brakes and available in three new livery exclusive designs (including the limited edition lime-on-green model you see here), the Rapide AMR takes “the world’s most beautiful four-door luxury sports car” to a new level. Drops Q4 2018.

Buy From Aston Martin $240,000

The Ultimate Guide to the 2018 Aston Martin V8 Vantage: Review, Price, Specs, Videos, Images, Performance & More

Introduction

One of the most anticipated sports cars of 2017 and the successor to its most successful model ever – the Aston Martin V8 Vantage was unveiled in late 2017 and – in a departure to the traditional launch photos of Astons in the past, where the car has been grey or green or even a burgundy, the Vantage arrived in striking, almost neon lime green.

This in a way signalled a departure for the brand; following on from reports of record profits for the brand in 2017, the confidence Aston Martin had at launch displayed in what it produced with the V8 Vantage: less part-sports part-touring car, more all-out sports car.

The car seems to have inherited some of the spirit of the ear-splitting track-only Vulcan übercar. That startling exterior accentuated the aggressive aerodynamic features in the bodywork, while demanding the attention of onlookers, guaranteeing their second glance.

With its new V8 Vantage, Aston Martin delivered a bold statement of intent.

Design, Styling & Interior

That purposeful intent is displayed on the car’s exterior, with a muscular stance that makes little effort to conceal the vast amount of aerodynamic work that Aston Martin has put into the car.

Aston has emphasised the dynamic direction it took with the new Vantage in its design, with overhangs front and rear kept to a minimum. Up front, the gaping Vulcan-inspired grille delivers air under the car to ensure the diffuser jutting out at the rear receives a continuous feed of clean air, while contributing to a system of fences that aid with engine cooling. This car is all style and substance.

Another example is the pair of gills in the Aston Martin’s flanks – while adding to the drama of the V8 Vantage’s looks, they also act to bleed air out from the front wheel arches. Combined with the front and rear diffusers and the upturned tail at the rear of the car, Aston Martin say the V8 Vantage produces a “significant amount” of downforce.

Inside, Aston Martin says it has continued the V8 Vantage’s focus by using sharp lines around the cockpit. Sitting in the Vantage, the impression is one of aggression, helped by the car’s high ‘waist’ and low roofline – though Aston says headroom is improved over the outgoing model thanks to a lower driving position.

The ‘unconventional’ styling direction Aston has taken with the Vantage has split opinion. We love it and look forward to seeing how it develops for the brand over the Vantage’s lifetime and beyond.

Performance

Power in the new Vantage comes courtesy of a Mercedes-Benz-sourced four-litre twin-turbo V8 mounted up front, which is good for 503bhp and 505 lb-ft of torque from 2000-5000rpm. Aston has finely tweaked the engine’s induction, exhaust and engine management systems in an effort to protect the character that its predecessor was so renowned for.

That power reaches the rear wheels via a ZF eight-speed automatic transmission, with this green streak capable of reaching 60mph in just 3.6 seconds. Top speed for the V8 Vantage is 195mph.

For those seeking an even more engaging drive, there is thought to be a seven-speed manual in the pipeline for the V8 Vantage – though the wait for that could be at least a year. Once available, the Vantage will be the only car that pairs the M177 Mercedes-AMG engine with a manual ‘box.

The last-generation Vantage sports car gained a V12 engine later in its life, adding more grunt and character to the car, with the combination of massive engine in a tiny, pretty sports car being a winner for the brand. While not having written off the idea entirely for the new model, Aston Martin is keen not to allow a heavier power plant affect the handling and dynamics of this model.

The aggressive styling and bold choice of launch colours have piqued interest in the V8 Vantage, with both representing a step change for the brand.

That aggression is not merely skin deep, with the V8 Vantage’s performance stats as imposing as its visual impact – not to mention a crackly exhaust note that hints at a barely-contained fury.

With a bonded aluminium chassis harnessing the technology used in the bigger DB11, though with 70% being new for the Vantage and a solidly-mounted rear sub frame to enhance the driver’s connection, handling, rigidity and weight were all key considerations during the design of the V8 Vantage to ensure exquisite handling and balance.

But that doesn’t mean power took a back seat – 505 lb-ft is on tap from 2000-5000 rpm, with horsepower peaking at 503bhp at 6000rpm. When that twin-turbo V8 gets on song it can launch this 1529kg, two seat ballistic lemon from 0-60 in 3.6 seconds and all the way on to 195mph.

Ride & Handling

With the V8 Vantage going up against the likes of the Porsche 911 GTS, engaging handling is a must. Thankfully, Aston Martin has prioritised this in the development of the V8 Vantage.

Power is managed by an electronic rear differential, which works with the car’s electronic stability control to send power to the wheel with the most grip.

The E-Diff also allows for adjustments at higher speeds, aiding stability and composition in a straight line or through the bends. Systems like Dynamic Torque Vectoring and Dynamic Stability Control also play a part in the V8 Vantage’s handling character, though by no means has Aston relied totally on electronics to “manufacture” a feel for the car.

The V8 Vantage boasts perfect 50:50 weight distribution and a low centre of gravity, thanks to its engine being mounted as far back and low down in the car’s body as can be allowed. The chassis uses the bonded aluminium structure techniques first seen on the DB11, though with the majority of components being completely new for the Vantage.

Pirelli P Zeros handle the sticky end of things, designed specifically for this car, while an Adaptive Damping System offers adjustability to three switchable modes: Sport, Sport Plus and Track.

Prices & Specs

The Aston Martin V8 Vantage will appear in US dealers in the second quarter of 2018 with prices starting around $149,995. The first deliveries will start around then – though at the end of 2017 (indeed, barely a week after it unveiled the car) Aston Martin revealed that order books for 2018 had already been filled, with waiting lists for 2019 already growing.

2018 Aston Martin Racing Vantage GTE

Revealed by Aston Martin the same day as the Vantage road car, with the pair launched simultaneously at an event in London, the GTE takes the Vantage’s already prodigious track talents and turns everything up to eleven.

The addition of that massive rear wing, racing decals and enlarged carbon fibre front and rear splitters, plus broader side skirts and wider track, turn the Vantage from cool-but-compliant pet python into an angry venomous spitting cobra.

Bulges and gouges in the bonnet make the muscular underpinnings look like they’re bursting to get out of a thin yellow veneer of yellow bodywork.

Aston Martin’s engineers have lifted the road car’s dynamics to another level with the racer, while meeting FIA GTE class regulations. Power is raised to around 540hp, while a full-length flat floor and those splitters and wings add even more downforce, helping the Vantage GTE snake its way around endurance circuits across the world.

Aston Martin released a video shortly after the announcement of the GTE. Detailing some of the hardware beneath the skin of the racecar, including Ohlins suspension components and Alcon brakes designed specifically for the Vantage GTE, the video allows a behind the scenes look into the development abd testing of the road-going Vantage’s body building cousin.

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Aston Martin V8 Vantage Galleries & Videos >
< Back To The Beginning

Peter Sellers’s 1961 Aston Martin DB4GT

Peter Sellers is the man you probably know best from Dr. Strangelove, The Pink Panther or one of his many other performances that led to him being considered one of the greatest comedians of all time. What…

Please Join Formula One, Aston Martin

Within the past decade or so, Formula One evolved in car design through aerodynamics and engine packaging. Gone are the days of the mighty V12 of the 1990’s and here is the world of turbochargers and energy recovery. Many have argued that current engine regulations have taken the fun out of the sport and limited participation to the ones that can afford the R&D costs.

I’m not going to take anything away from Lewis Hamilton and his Mercedes-Benz Petronas team, but I’m just tired of seeing him on the podium. Don’t even get me started on Finger Boy!

There is a solution to everything: there is a revision of the regulations come 2021 with hopes of attracting new constructors to join in on the fun. And it seems like it has attracted a maker across the Pond.

There have been reports that Aston Martin is keen on joining in Formula 1 under Team Red Bull Racing. While they’re currently working with Renault who’s supplying McLaren, and Renault this season, Red Bull hasn’t been doing great this season with issues in Bahrain, an engine issue during FP3 in Shanghai, and a third-place finish in Spain.

Autosport.com reports that Aston Martin is paying attention to the new rules, especially with the focus on a simpler turbocharged V6 engine and the removal of the MGU-H unit.

They are aware that they must be competitive before talking with Team Red Bull and hopefully, things will get sorted out by 2019,

“We’re looking at 2021, so it’s somewhere down the road,” Palmer told Autosport.

“But if we can’t pass the ‘it’s OK for Red Bull test’ then that probably means we’re not passing the ‘it’s competitive’ test, and it has to be competitive.

“There’s approximately nine months’ work in front of us to convince ourselves one way or the other.

“You’ve got simulation tools and single cylinder work, and that gives you a pretty accurate correlation between the testing world and the simulation world.”

We look forward to seeing Aston Martin join the likes of Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz onto the podium. Carry on!

Blast from the past: Aston Martin announces limited run of V12 Vantage V600

The old adage goes the customer is always right. In the case of the Aston Martin Vantage V600, we think they got it very right indeed.

Aston Martin recently released the new Vantage, a lithe, neon green sports car that looks like something out of a sci-fi comic book. Despite the futuristic impression it gives off, the Vantage pays its dues to its roots; that shape is unmistakably Aston.

The company has never been afraid of looking to its past for design inspiration – look at any model in the Aston Martin lineup today and you can trace elements of its design and execution back to the DB5 and even the original 2-Litre Sports released under David Brown back in 1948. That car is so influential to the Aston bloodline that his initials grace the company’s grand tourers to this day.

For the V600, Aston Martin customers commissioned the return of another historic namebadge for the company, with V600 having adorned a bonkers limited-run twin-supercharged 600bhp Vantage built without ABS – a last hurrah for that incarnation of the Vantage before tightening emissions regulations edged it out of the lineup.

Fast forward to 2018: the new Vantage V600

Aston Martin says the spirit of that original car from 20 years ago carries on in this new incarnation. Based on the outgoing ‘VH’ Vantage, the 2018 Aston Martin V12 Vantage V600 features the charismatic 6-litre Aston V12 up front, upgraded to produce 600bhp, much like its namesake.

Just fourteen examples of the new V600 will be produced, with Aston promising the ultimate analogue Vantage, which should appeal to nostalgic fans of the brand who seek the on-edge feel of supercars from the brand’s history but without the danger, age-related issues or risk of breakdown that come with it.

To that end there is no semi-automatic ‘box – the V600 comes with a seven-speed manual transmission, connecting the driver directly with the experience of shoving that 600bhp to the rear wheels.

Keeping the V600 on the road is front and read dual independent wishbone suspension with three-stage adaptive damping for a sporty feel when required and a more comfortable ride when not.

While the body shape is that of the old model, aggressive styling cues let the in-the-know observer know that this is no ordinary Vantage. That bodywork is fully carbon fibre, with a strake along the side hinting at the menacing potential of the car. A darkened grille adds to the V600’s presence while providing cooling to the V12, while at the rear a quad exhaust juts from a carbon-fibre diffuser.

Aston Martin says the V12 Vantage V600 is available on request, with the fourteen models slated for delivery in the autumn.

How much do you want to be among the fourteen lucky souls to get behind the wheel of the V12 Vantage V600?

Aston Martin Valkyrie to be made from Materials that F1 Cars Could Only Dream Of

A report by British magazine, Autocar, suggests that the Aston Martin Valkyrie, co-developed by Red Bull Racing, will use materials that are far in advance of modern Formula 1 cars. It is clear that no expenses are being spared on the £2.5 million hypercar. The components are said to yield far higher performance than currently available on a Formula 1 car.

Whilst no exact details are given and the final shape and production specification has yet to be revealed, it is thought that the no-limits ideology of the Valkyrie has allowed designers to develop parts that are unrestricted by any conventional racing regulations. The challenge has been to homologate these parts for the road!

It is believed that Aston Martin has set itself the goal of lapping “Silverstone as fast as an F1 car”. In order to achieve this, the Valkyrie would need to be quick and to generate plenty of downforce. Some sources have suggested that it could generate as much as 4,000 lbs (1,816 kg) of downforce at top speed.

The Aston Martin Valkyrie will be powered by the 6.5-liter naturally-aspirated Cosworth V12 engine. It is expected to generate between 900 and 1,000 hp. Linked to this powerhouse will be a 7-speed automatic gearbox supplied by Ricardo.

Just 150 Valkyries will be produced with every single one accounted for. The British company is aiming to start production towards the end of this year with customer cars arriving from early next year. It will face stiff competition from Mercedes-AMG who have their own hypercar under development with a similar high-performance ethos.

Aston Martin working on mid-engine Valkyrie ‘brother’ to rival McLaren P1

We know about the Aston Martin Valkyrie and the Valkyrie AMR Pro (pictured). And we know Aston Martin is planning a mid-engine rival for the Ferrari 488 and McLaren 720S. Now Autocar reports that the English luxury maker is working on yet another mid-engine model, a hypercar to outdo the McLaren P1 and Ferrari LaFerrari and stand up to the coming McLaren BP23. The newest addition to the small carmaker’s grand plans is said to be known internally as “brother of the Valkyrie,” and came about because of the sellout success of both the Valkyrie and Valkyrie AMR Pro.

Both “brother of Valkyrie” and the 488 competitor are expected to use a carbon monococque with aluminum subframes. Both will use lessons from Aston Martin’s tie-up with the Red Bull Formula 1 team, especially in packaging. Both are due to hit the market around 2021. And both will be products of the carmaker’s Performance Design and Engineering Centre, a base of 130 engineers set up at Red Bull F1’s Milton Keyes headquarters. However, the former car will fight in the £1M-plus price bracket ($1.4M-plus) where various manufacturers have made amazing hay with warp-speed daily drivers, and will be a limited edition “in order to add to its desirability.”

We remain in the dark on powertrains for both cars, but outsiders expect both to use a V8. When it comes to the “brother” car, Aston Martin’s working relationship with Mercedes-AMG means it could tap the 4.0-liter V8 used by the DB11 and the Vantage. Apparently that engine can be wrung out to 800 horsepower with help from an ultimate EQ Boost setup. That still wouldn’t be enough to compete in the segment, though, so the “brother” could become a demonstrator for Aston Martin’s electric know-how — a rolling showcase that could turn its halo light on a potential electric sports car. Or perhaps there’s another option that turns to Cosworth, the company helping develop the 1,000-hp 6.5-liter V12 in the Valkyrie.

Aston Martin boss Andy Palmer wouldn’t say much more about the junior supercar powertrain than, “In our portfolio today, we don’t have an engine capable of giving us the output we require. Whether through collaboration with AMG or whether by ourselves, we have to find an answer.” He told Australian outlet Motoring that it would involve hybrid assistance with power as the aim and “a fringe benefit on efficiency.” That sounds a much more likely case for the AMG motor, where an 800-hp ceiling gives Aston Martin room to tone things down and still bare fangs at rivals. As an aside, the Vanquish is expected to “move into true front-engined supercar territory,” which will make brand space for every offering in the lineup.

Aston Martin raided its main competitors’ personnel departments last year to give it the best chance of beating those competitors. Last year Max Swaj, who was head of innovation and body structures at Ferrari and Maserati, and Joerg Ross, who was head of advanced engines at the two Italian camakers, jumped ship for England along with a third, unnamed engineer. Then it nabbed Chris Goodwin, McLaren’s test driver of 20 years, to provide the kind of feedback that’s made superstars of the 675LT and 720S, and who was last photographed in the McLaren BP23 due next year.

Related Video:

Aston Martin hires Ferrari’s ‘key guys’ to challenge 488 GTB

Aston Martin is wasting no time in its aggressive product rollout, and it’s putting Ferrari and other supercar makers on notice.

At the recent launch of the DB11 V8 in Catalonia, Spain, we caught up with Aston Martin CEO Andy Palmer. The Aston chief gave us new details on plans for a mid-engine car to go up against the Ferrari 488 GTB, the McLaren 720S and the Lamborghini Huracán.

Palmer says Aston has harnessed a great deal of learning from the $3 million Valkyrie hypercar and plans to apply that to its next mid-engine car, slated to land sometime in 2020 or so. As indicated in part of our conversation below, design plans for that car are developing quickly.

Andy Palmer, chief executive officer of Aston Martin Lagonda Ltd., reacts during a Bloomberg Television interview in Singapore, on Saturday, Sept. 16, 2017. Palmer discussed the impact of Brexit on the auto industry. Photographer: Vivek Prakash/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Autoblog: You said there will be a forthcoming mid-engine sports car. I still think the Ferrari 488 GTB is one of the best I’ve driven. How do you compete with that?

Andy Palmer: “Well, I agree with you. That’s the best car in its segment. And we’re going to take it on. And I realize the gravity of that statement, of what that means.”

AB: So how do you take on the 488 GTB?

AP: “Well, to start with, you recruit from Ferrari the head of body structures, and the head of powertrains. I’ve now got three of Ferrari’s key guys. And really, it’s a big compliment to Ferrari. That’s the defining car in its segment, and it’s really, really good. And those three guys now work for me. And you combine those guys with Nick [Lines, chief planning officer, Aston Martin] and Marek [Reichman, chief creative officer, Aston Martin] who you know really well, and you create some great recipes. And now I’ve got a better understanding of what that car looks like.”

AB: How far along is that car? Is there a clay model already?

AP: “Yeah, there’s clay. There’s actually eight quarter-scales. And there’s one in particular that I’m leaning toward. We’ve got it pushed out; it’s gone to a second studio in Milton Keynes. That studio is different from Gaydon. And I’ve got a pretty good idea of what the replacement for the 488 is going to be like as well. So, if we’re going in that market, we need to be ahead of the 488. And there’s no naïveté about what that means.”

One of the recruits Palmer is referring to is Max Szwaj, former head of innovation and body structures at Ferrari and Maserati. Szwaj has been named vice president and chief technical officer in his new role in Gaydon. Another recruit, Joerg Ross, formerly head of advanced engines at Ferrari and Maserati, assumes the chief engineer, powertrain, role at Aston. A third recruit by way of Modena is a very recent acquisition and has yet to be formally announced.

Aston Martin’s forthcoming car would slot above the Vanquish GT and below the Valkyrie hypercar in the lineup. And while the British luxe automaker is developing replacements for its existing lineup — most recently kicked off by the new DB11 — the Ferrari 488 fighter would join the upcoming DBX SUV as an all-new model line for Aston.

Related Video:

Aston Martin has a second mid-engined car coming

Aston Martin is expanding its exotic car horizons beyond GT cars into the realm of mid-engined sports cars. We’re not talking about the upcoming Valkyrie hypercar, though. Instead, we’re talking about a more mainstream mid-engined supercar designed to take on the Ferrari 488, Lamborghini Huracán, and McLaren 720S. Andy Palmer, CEO of Aston Martin, stated this specifically when discussing future product plans with Auto Express.

According to Auto Express, Palmer said the car will be a competitor the 488, and will launch in 2020 as part of a plan to release a new model every year from now until 2023. Before the mid-engined car will be the rest of Aston’s new GT line and the DBX crossover, and following the Ferrari fighter will be a pair of Lagonda models and the DB12. The 2020 launch date is a full year sooner than we were expecting for a sub-Valkyrie mid-engined car.

Palmer cites a few reasons for going mid-engined. He explained that it’s the segment standard, and that it’s ideal for weight distribution. He also noted that going mid-engined will help bridge the gap between the top-tier Vanquish GT car and the Valkyrie. That’s a gap with loads of room for another model, too, since the Vanquish will likely be comparable to the Ferrari F12berlinetta, which costs a bit over $300,000. The Valkyrie, on the other hand, will go for $3 million and have performance comparable to the LaFerrari and the Koenigsegg One:1.

Related Video:

Watch $80M worth of Aston Martins tear around new factory

Earlier this month, Aston Martin took possession of the former Royal Air Force base in St. Athan in South Wales. The company will convert the space to new factory that will start producing new cars, including the future DBX crossover, in 2019. That date is quite a ways away, and in the meantime, Aston has a huge empty facility sitting around. So what better to do than take a bunch of Astons there and play with them?

In the video above, two of Aston Martin’s racing drivers and the company’s chief engineer rollick around the massive hangars and open runways. And of course, only Aston’s best are on hand for the trio to drive. You’ll see vintage and modern racecars, and hypercar royalty such as the Vulcan and One-77, and Bond classics including the DB5 and DB10. The total value of the cars shown is over $80 million at current exchange rates.

Although Aston’s best is on display in this video, the company does also present arguably its worst product. The Toyota iQ-based Aston Martin Cygnet has a cameo. Clearly Aston has a sense of humor about the microcar to show it in this video. The scene involves the One-77 and Vulcan literally driving rings around it.

Towards the end, we also get the briefest of teasers for the DBX crossover. The engineer and racecar drivers peak under the covers of three cars. The first two are the Valkyrie and DBX concepts. They just start to lift the cover on the third vehicle, only revealing some headlight details, when Aston’s CEO arrives to inspect the facility. We don’t see anything more of this car for the rest of the video. But seeing as the film ends with a teaser drawing of the DBX, and since it will be produced at St. Athan, it’s safe to guess that third covered vehicle is the production, or near-production, DBX. Check it all out above.

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Sx-Z | 2012 Pebble Beach Concept Cars

GALLERY: 2012 Pebble Beach Concept Car Lawn Recap

The Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance showcases an introduction to some of the years best revealed production and concept cars.

If concepts and exotics are your thing, like they are ours, the Concept Car Lawn is the place to be and see the latest concepts.

Check out the gallery of this years Concept Car Lawn below.

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Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin Vanquish

2013 Aston Martin Vanquish Set For Pebble Beach Debut

The renowned Monterey automotive week in California starts soon and the highlight os it is the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance taking place on August 19. Aston Martin will showing off, for the first time on U.S. soil, its new 2012 Vanquish at some of the various Monterey automotive week, specifically Pebble Beach.

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VIDEO: The MOST Legendary Of ALL James Bonds’ Cars To Get A Revival

When you mention the Aston Martin DB5, the first thing that comes to mind is James Bond. That’s because the DB5 is the most legendary Bond vehicle there is.

It evokes the same feelings as the Bond movies and Bond himself – Debonaire, classy, mysterious and the epitome of cool.

With the upcoming release of Skyfall in October, and the DB5 making a striking appearance in the film, the makers of Skyfall have released a video of the DB5 on set and in action.

VIDEO: ’50 Years of Bond’ Cars Montage Trailer

The cars from the James Bond films have become legendary. To celebrate the release of the upcoming Bond 50 box set, a video montage trailer featuring the films most recognizable automobiles has been released. Bentleys, Audis, Alfa Romeos and of course Bond’s signature Aston Martin DB5!

Bond 50, which celebrates 50 years of James Bond with the debut of all 22 films in a Blu-ray box set, will be released this September, just in time to coincide with the box office release of Skyfall in October 2012.

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

OFFICIAL: 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Aston Martin has just released official photos and specs for its all-new limited 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster.

Specs:
Powered by Aston’s 6.0-liter naturally aspirated V12 engine
Cranks out 510-horsepower
470 pound-feet of torque
0-to-62 mph time of 4.5 seconds
Top speed of 190 mph

Exterior:
Redesigned rear decklid, which includes a new “flip” to provide high-speed stability and lower front intakes
Chassis changes and modified damper setup with unique valves and redesigned rear springs
Carbon fiber all around the body

Interior:
Optional interior package with additional carbon fiber pieces.

The roadster, and all of its glory, comes with a starting price of ₤150,000 – $233,340 US.

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

Sx-Z | 2013 Aston Martin V12 Vantage Roadster

SPIED: Aston Martin’s New V12 Vantage Roadster

Aston Martin’s V12 Vantage Roadster was spotted in London with its top in action and what appears to be a new option – colored carbon fiber weave.