DBS Newcomers: 2008 Aston Martin DBS


Merc1

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It seems you can't mention Aston's new DBS, star car of "Casino Royale," without also making reference to Her Majesty's secret servant. So there; obligatory 007 allusion done.

Because we've previously revealed the particulars on the DBS (July 2007), the most potent Aston Martin production car ever, let's move right to the juicy stuff. Imagine, if you will, a La Perla negligee that goes 191 mph. Sex revealed in aluminum and carbon fiber. That's the DBS in a nutshell.

The big V-12 does its best work with all the subtlety of a U2 concert. Squeeze the throttle and the exhaust note detonates, a bi-valve front airbox cracks wide, cams whine; before you can say "hang on" you're into the rev limiter. The engine is 510-stallions strong but light-switch responsive and turbine smooth. Aston claims 0 to 62 mph in 4.3 seconds. Keeping the wild rush in check are gigantic Brembo carbon-ceramic brakes, six-piston calipers in front and four-piston in back, which improve stopping distances by 10 percent over the DB9, Aston says.

Despite a carbon-fiber hood, decklid, and front fenders (the rest of the body is crafted in aluminum), the DBS checks in at 3750 pounds (though that's about 140 pounds less than the DB9). This is a big, heavy coupe; on the winding roads around Cahors, France, the DBS felt more "GT" than "sports car." Yet with shocks and springs 50 percent stiffer than the DB9's, the ride borders on too firm for relaxed long-distance touring. And that's in comfort mode. Switch to sport, and the adaptive Bilsteins-which automatically switch among five different settings-remain in their stiffest position as often as the chassis computer's ride/handling algorithm allows. In compensation, grip level is quite high. In most turns, you'll run out of nerve before the PZeroes have even begun to speak up.

You have to wonder about the little things: The test car's nav display flickered like an old Philco, and the elaborate steel and sapphire "Emotion Control Unit" (aka, the key), which glides into the dash accompanied by a theatrical red glow, seems tailor-made for troubles.

Yet even at about $265K, Aston will no doubt quickly move every one of the 500-700 DBSs it builds this model year (about a third are headed to the U.S.). After all, sex sells.


2008 Aston Martin DBS - Newcomers - Motor Trend


M
 
I'm thinking private practise.... and in 10 yrs time buy myself on these beasts... hopefully in ten yrs time it will still be the best looking thing on four wheels :D
 

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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