DB9 Aston Martin DB9 MY2011 - Facelift/Minor Update (+ First Drives)

The Aston Martin DB9 is a two-door grand tourer car produced by Aston Martin. Predecessor: Aston Martin DB7. Successor: Aston Martin DB11. Production: 2004-2016.

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For some reason, I loved the pre-facelift more. The front of this car is just so wrong:

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You might have seen elsewhere that CAR was embedded in the Aston Martin pit team at the weekend's 2010 Le Mans 24-hour race. Which meant we were well placed to pilfer one of the facelifted DB9s on display at the Aston customer hospitality unit at the French race circuit and drive it back to Blighty.

A 'facelifted' 2010 Aston Martin DB9? It doesn't look very different!

Yes, let's call it the 2011 model year DB9. Aston types hesitate to use the word 'facelift', it's just part of the continuous improvement that's gradually spruced up the DB9 since launch back in 2003.

CAR bumped into Aston Martin design director Marek Reichmann in the AMR pits at Le Mans and he gave us the lowdown on the 2011 DB9. 'We are continuing the elegant feel of the DB9: there's a new front bumper, new side skirts, new colours,' he explained. 'These are mild changes – we've made 12,000 DB9s since launch and don't feel the need to start afresh. There are also plenty of under-the-skin changes.'

Still looks the biz, then?

You bet. I've previously criticised Aston's current line-up for looking too samey and while I stand by that, there's no arguing with the basic building blocks of the Aston look. The DB9 set the template back at the 2003 Frankfurt show, but carries its years well. This is an elegant 2+2 coupé, and looks every inch the £122,445 sports car from every angle. I especially love the coke bottle swell to the hips that lends the DB9 a sprung, muscular feel.

What's new? The double-decker grille with (slightly tacky) perforated mesh low down is fresh, while the sidesills are recontoured with a more exaggerated 'hockey stick' kink said to be most visible on lighter colours and the rear bumper and lights are minutely different, too. Fresh wheel designs are available and our car came in a fetching silvery green.

And what's new inside the 2011 model year Aston Martin DB9?

The interior of the DB9 is spruced up with some previously unseen toys and equipment. A Bang & Olufsen stereo with pop-up tweeters (think top-end Audi style) is now available at a steep £4000 or so and delivers crisp, clear tunes; it seamlessly mates with your iPod too.

The 6.0-litre V12 is unchanged, but fettling the details means that CO2 has been poleaxed by nearly 50g/km. The claimed carbon dioxide figure tumbles to 345g/km. Meanwhile the aluminium VH chassis is spruced up by the addition of Bilstein variable dampers; we've seen them on the DBS and Rapide, but it's the first time the DB9 has offered them in place of the regular Bilstein struts.

How does the revised DB9 drive?

CAR picks up the fettled DB9 on Sunday night an hour after the end of the Le Mans 24-hour race. Click here to find out how Aston Martin Racing got on at La Sarthe. The car looks slinky and elegant, drawing admiring glances from most race-goers – a theme that's going to remain for our entire nine-hour drive back home. Owners of the countless TVRs, Porsches, Lotuses and more humble machinery making the annual pilgrimage nearly all give approving nods and smiles to the Aston. It remains a trigger brand for enthusiasts, of that I'm certain.

Aston Martin DB9 Coupé (2011 model year) CAR review | Road Testing Reviews | Car Magazine Online

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Just a short comparison.

The car totally lost its agressive face (way to much V8 Vantage now):

Pre-Facelift



Facelift:



and heres V8 Vantage:



Bring the old DB9 back!!!!
 
Im not feeling this facelift, looks like a tacky after market body-kit:eusa_doh:

My very first thought was: Baby Face - and it still looks like it. I really hope, they will not give these finishing touches to the DBS!
 
I thought they would at least update the headlights and use LED for the indicators. This is the only give away to the actual age of the car. Other than that, they should just leave it as it is.
 
Just another review by classicdriver:



June 2010: This is the latest DB9, deliveries of which will commence next month. The engineering team has introduced subtle styling changes and these, together with a now standard, ‘Adaptive Damping System', prompt the British company to proclaim it the “world’s definitive grand tourer”.

We drove a Touchtronic-equipped DB9 coupé, beautifully finished in the new shade ‘Amethyst Red’ (with interior colour ‘Deep Purple’), back from this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours.

Visually, the changes are as follows: a new grille sits above a new front bumper and revised lower intake; attractive, hexagonal-design mesh is used front and rear; a more pronounced ‘hockey stick’ curve can be seen on the sill, ahead of the rear wheels; clear rear light lenses; 20-spoke diamond-turned alloy wheels as standard, and new headlamp bezels.

As options, 2011MY buyers can choose alternative new-design wheels (fitted to this car), the brilliant Bang & Olufsen hi-fi, a ‘Bright finish’ grille, and a ‘Double Apex’ alloy finish on the centre console – an attractive touch you see here.

The new package is finished off by a new tyre-pressure monitoring system and a revised Bluetooth microphone. It’s evolution rather than revolution – the design, now seven years old, is one of the sexiest out there, so why change it?

Under the skin, the big news is the introduction, as standard, of ADS ('Adaptive Damping System') control, similar to that fitted to the DBS and Rapide. The settings are bespoke to the DB9 and mean that default mode is optimised for ride comfort, while ‘Sport’ tightens things up for more press-on motoring.

As a result, the previous ‘Sports Pack’ option is no longer offered. While most buyers will opt for the extra-cost, six-speed ZF Touchtronic 2 automatic, a six-speed manual is still available.

Behind the wheel, having cleared the immediate post-race Le Mans traffic and gunning the big V12 along French D-roads, the first thing you notice is the improved ride and much quieter cabin. The outgoing journey was done in a V12 Vantage – a fairly uncompromising speed machine, with prodigious engine performance and a sporting, no-holds-barred ride.

Now that Aston has this at one end of the 12-cylinder range (together with the similarly powered, 510bhp DBS) and the luxurious, grand touring Rapide at the other, it can afford to be less compromised with the DB9.

The car has matured into the perfect long-distance GT, with no supercar pretensions; and it's more comfortable in its (still sublimely attractive) skin. The 470bhp, 6.0-litre V12 gives it a top speed of 190mph, while 0-60mph comes up in 4.6 seconds – fast by anyone’s standards.

As ever, a manual will get the most out of the engine, although holding third and fourth with the transmission mapping in ‘Sport’ will cope with most circumstances, unleashing the car’s full potential.

Selecting the firmer damping position with the new ADS button makes the car more responsive to a degree, but it’s less uncompromising than the old, optional Sports Pack. I think that’s partly a function of the much better NVH characteristics of the 2011MY version, and partly due to memories of two drives last year in a manual Sports Pack-equipped DB9 that demanded careful handling in less-than-perfect conditions. It was, I recall, something more akin to the V12 Vantage than Rapide.

The latest DB9 is no less a driver’s car; it’s just that, freed of the necessity to produce a supercar covering all possible buyer profiles, the company can concentrate on producing the perfect long-distance grand tourer, as at home on an everyday commute to Canary Wharf as covering mile after mile from Calais to Cannes.

In the latest-specification DB9 - available now - Aston Martin has achieved this very well.

2011 Aston Martin DB9: First Drive - Classic Driver - MAGAZINE - driving report



 
Not really a big difference but looks refreshed. Wonder how long ProDrive are going to take on them to replace the car with a new model. The One-77 is not exactly a beauty so I'm not really holding my breath for an even more gorgeous DB9
 
It wasn't the looks of the car that needed a touch up, its the comparatively weak 470hp V12 engine. Sounds great yes, but performance is lacking the Ferrari/Porsche/Lamborghini/Mercedes competition.

That said I still love this car, but I'd have to have a DBS.


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Autocar - Aston Martin DB9 5.9 V12 Touchtronic














What is it?

Strange how car makers often leave the best until last. Here’s Aston Martin’s five-year-old DB9 Volante going through its second mid-life tweak, with just a couple of years of life left, and it has hit the jackpot.

The changes are minimal, really, but what an effect. Visually, there are a few external styling tweaks to the grille, bumpers and tail-lights.

But crucially, the Volante also gets new computer-controlled Bilstein dampers, managed by mapping that shows Aston’s engineers can create a nicely balanced yet compliant chassis still capable of very good body control.

What’s it like?

In so doing, they’ve fed some Jaguar-style sophistication into the DB9’s chassis. What a contrast to the first-gen Volante, a soggy and ill-disciplined machine.

The foundations for this transformation were laid in the DB9’s 2010 model year revisions late last year.

A new cross-car beam with beefed-up support for the steering column sharpened the steering and a shear panel stiffener for the front subframe eradicated front-end waywardness.

Aston introduced Bilstein dampers in place of Multimatic units back then, but they still operated with distinct bump/rebound steps. And there was just one setting. For better body control, you needed to spec the sports chassis, with the inevitably compromised ride.

These new infinitely variable dampers get rid of those steps, and bring a much better standard setting or firmer ride at the touch of a button.

For some drivers, the body control still might not be sufficiently Germanic and iron-fisted, even in the sports setting. But everyone else will regard it as a great step forward.

In fact, the ease with which the Volante now carries speed through corners throws the spotlight on the ZF auto, which, at times, seems non-plussed by the Volante’s new alacrity.

It’s a minor point, but it gives clues to where Aston will be going with the new DB9, out around 2012/13. That car will be based around today’s underpinnings.

Should I buy one?

If Aston can squeeze further significant improvements out of the existing bonded alloy chassis, as it has in the 2011 model year cars, then the DB9 has a fascinating future. But right now, this is the best DB9 Volante you can buy.



Aston Martin DB9 Volante Touchtronic - Road Test First Drive - Autocar.co.uk


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Aston Martin DB9 successor spied testing undisguised

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Aston Marin engineers are working on the successor of the DB9, they have kept it away from prying eyes for quite some time but now a new prototype has popped up doing some winter testing.
The latest model will reportedly be unleashed on the market during 2013 and will take on the signature styling elements that make the legendary British brand's model unmistakeable. It currently carries the codename Project VH500, but it will adopt a more recognizable name upon launch with DB10 or DB11 being mentioned.
Rumors of what will power the DB9 replacement have been pretty scarce, but there has been talk of a 6.0-liter V12 that produces in excess of 470 hp (477 PS / 350 kW).

Source:
Read more: Aston Martin DB9 successor spied testing undisguised

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Aston Martin

Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings PLC is a British manufacturer of luxury sports cars and grand tourers headquartered in Gaydon, Warwickshire, England, United Kingdom. Founded in 1913 by Lionel Martin and Robert Bamford, and steered from 1947 by David Brown, it became associated with expensive grand touring cars in the 1950s and 1960s, and with the fictional character James Bond following his use of a DB5 model in the 1964 film Goldfinger. Their sports cars are regarded as a British cultural icon.
Official website: Aston Martin

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