Valkyrie [Official] Aston Martin - From AM-RB 001 to Valkyrie


The Aston Martin Valkyrie (also known by its code-names as AM-RB 001 and Nebula) is a limited production hybrid sports car collaboratively built by Aston Martin, Red Bull Racing Advanced Technologies, and several other parties. Production: November 2021 – December 2024.
Wow. Some people have a real talent for putting a spec together.

That's a very special one even by Aston Martin Valkyrie standards.

PLUS I've been made aware that Aston Martin has apparently signed a deal with Lucid for supply of new electrical architecture specifically in late January, so my Source states. I guess we will find out.
 
Surreal to see it in a "normal" setting. The design is perfection. It looks unique, alien but not weird like a Nevera or other niche hypercars.
 
Valkyrie AMR Pro 08/40 in Veloqx Indigo.

Screen Shot 2023-02-27 at 9.18.44 PM.webp

Screen Shot 2023-02-27 at 9.19.03 PM.webp

Screen Shot 2023-02-27 at 9.19.53 PM.webp
 
I must have missed that there is a spider variant! What a looker!

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

:)
 
Aston Martin Valkyrie review

A few very fast laps of the Bahrain International Circuit in Aston Martin's £2.5mil, Adrian Newey-designed hypercar


1-aston-martin-valkyrie-amr-pro_0_0.v1.jpg


"Has it been worth the wait? We first told you about the joint plans of Aston Martin and Red Bull Racing to produce a hypercar designed by Formula 1 ace Adrian Newey – the Aston Martin Valkyrie - all the way back in 2015. The journey from there to here has been long and complex, with the Valkyrie project outlasting the tenure of two Aston Martin CEOs. But now, with most of the 150 customer cars delivered, we are finally getting a turn behind the wheel.

And what a turn it is. The Bahrain International Circuit might seem to offer a limited opportunity to sample any car for the first time, but it is one of the few venues capable of allowing the 1140bhp Valkyrie to stretch its legs. The first question is answered long before I leave the pit lane for the first time: yes, this is undoubtedly the most extreme factory-built car to legally wear numberplates. Other cars might be within the frame of reference of its astonishing performance – but none of them is road legal.

To call the Valkyrie a tour de force sells it short. Pretty much every part of it is a testament to Newey’s refusal to compromise his original vision. Aston chief designer Miles Nurnberger, freshly returned to the sports car maker from his brief stint as Dacia’s styling boss, recalls having to quote millimetres with decimal places in discussions with Newey to prove his team weren’t being slapdash with the Valkyrie’s closely guarded dimensions. In one meeting, he extracted an unprecedented 8mm concession to expand the passenger compartment – something that won a round of applause from.

Not that the finished car feels in any way spacious. I rode in the Valkyrie in 2021 sitting next to then CEO Tobias Moers on the hill at the Goodwood Festival of Speed and the experience showed that two occupants are never going to be able to share the narrow cockpit with any semblance of comfort, although I suspect owners will have no difficulty finding volunteers willing to squeeze themselves in.


It is much better with a single occupant, beyond the indignity of limboing over the huge side pods and narrow door. Once installed, leg room proves reasonable, the pedal box moves – although the footwell is tight. Elbow space is constrained by the side of the tub, and the need to wear a helmet means the bucket seat’s minimal lower padding has been removed to stop my head from hitting the roof. This is at a less than lanky 5ft 11in.

The view from the driver’s seat is like sitting in a high-tech Group C racer. The Valkyrie’s canopy-style windscreen seems impossibly curved. (Creating a windscreen wiper mechanism that turns the blade to maintain contact was another tricky engineering challenge required for road homologation.) A small video screen sits at each side for the rear-view cameras and there’s a small touchscreen, Aston’s first.

Almost all the controls are integrated into the squared-off steering wheel, including toggles for the three chassis settings – Urban, Sport and Track – plus the ERS button, which gives a boost of recovered electrical urge through the 141bhp electric motor that sits between the 6.5-litre V12 and seven-speed sequential gearbox. The e-motor also works to fill the torque gap between gearshifts.

The good news in Bahrain is that the Valkyrie’s active suspension system and stability control are now functional. They weren’t when I rode shotgun at Goodwood. In Track mode, the Valkyrie reduces its ride height to improve downforce, which is managed by an array of active winglets and flaps that are able to produce a collective peak of up to 1100kg of aerodynamic assistance.

There is no surprise that the Cosworth-developed V12 is the highlight of highlights. Even starting it feels special, as the engine turns for several seconds before it fires to build oil pressure. Although I’m wearing a helmet, it is still savagely loud at a 1000rpm idle – with another 10,000rpm to go – and vibration zings through the seat. The cogs that drive the gear-driven camshaft sit at the bulkhead end of the V12, so they’re just inches behind occupants’ heads.

Getting rolling is easy. The axial flux motor of the hybrid system that sits between engine and gearbox can provide low-speed drive for manoeuvring – one of the reasons there is no reverse gear. The Valkyrie isn’t electric enough to power itself with the engine off, but it rumbles off the line smoothly until the clutch engages.

Even on a wide, open and otherwise empty track, getting to full throttle feels like an adventure. Pushing the throttle delivers a visceral thrill from the speed at which the engine reacts. There is no delay, just instant thrust, delivered at a rate that feels close to the immediacy of a high-end EV but continues to grow as revs rise.

For much of my first stint, I’m short shifting, my brain ordering higher ratios in response to the noise and savagery well before the first of the change-up lights has illuminated. It’s only on the track’s longer straights that I can initially summon the discipline to hang on for the altitudinous redline, by which time the V12 is almost painfully loud, even through the padding of the helmet. The forces are such that the ERS button is an anti-climax: pressing it on the longest straight doesn’t add appreciably to the thrust.

It is also psychologically hard to keep accelerating to the ends of the longer straights, because the rate of change is so great that it becomes difficult for my brain to juggle the increasing speed with the obvious need to slow down. My early braking points prove embarrassingly cautious, given the power of the huge carbon-ceramic discs. But the brake pedal has a slight feel of deadness at the very top of its travel, limiting initial confidence, and you can feel its resistance lessening at the end of some bigger stops. With faith built, though, braking performance seems undiminished – and, to be fair to the car, it has done multiple stints on track before my drive.

A bigger surprise is the sensation of the engine starting to lose power as coolant temperatures rise to critical levels. The V12 downrates to protect itself when this happens, progressively reducing the redline as it does so. Changing up early for half a lap or so brings the redline on the digital tacho back up. When I return to the pit lane, Aston’s mechanics say the car is struggling with high ambient temperatures.

The derating is a small issue and, to be honest, most of my first session on track has been taken up with acclimatising to the hugeness of the performance. Bahrain’s turns have served mostly as breaks between unleashing full fury on the straights. So heading back out for a second stint gives me the chance to properly experience the more subtle talents of the car’s chassis.

Pure lateral adhesion is one area where the Valkyrie doesn’t feel otherworldly, because of its need to wear road tyres. Our test car is riding on Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2s rather than the more aggressive (but still street-legal) optional Cup 2 Rs. So while grip is huge, it is less than it would be in a track special riding on slicks. This feels most obvious in slower and tighter corners, where the Valkyrie turns keenly but the traction control works hard to maintain discipline on the way out. Increasing speed soon brings downforce and a corresponding sense of dynamic security. But the active suspension means that the Valkyrie never feels heavy or lacking in agility.

Nor does it feel snappy or scary, even when I turn the variable traction control down. This confirms that the transition from grip to slip, although sudden, is well flagged and easily corrected – certainly at relatively low speeds. Of course, this is on a bone-dry track with generous run-offs. A wet B-road would be a very different challenge. But the Valkyrie’s chassis seems impressively friendly considering the forces it has to contain and direct.

Not that any chumminess is present in much of the rest of the experience. The cabin feels tighter after a stint on track, with multiple points of painful contact under higher g-loadings. And while the chassis’ Urban mode softens the suspension, it definitely doesn’t make the Valkyrie plush.

Cruising around for the photos gives me the chance to switch from a helmet to the active noise-cancelling headset Aston recommends for road use. This works amazingly well – so well in fact that I pop an earpiece off at 4000rpm to see how loud the engine truly is. The answer is ‘ouch’: you couldn’t spend any time in the cabin without wearing some form of protection without risking hearing loss. Standing on the pit wall while others blast past proves the V12 sounds amazing from the outside, but sadly not from within.

Yet the Valkyrie’s compromises are all down to the single-minded vision it was born from, one that hasn’t been toned down during the long road to production. The original idea, as with the McLaren F1, came from a meeting of four blokes – in this case, a pub lunch for Aston’s then CEO Andy Palmer, chief marketing officer Simon Sproule and Red Bull Racing’s Adrian Newey and Christian Horner.

Palmer and Sproule have left Aston, and Red Bull Racing is now working independently to realise another of Newey’s fever dreams – the even faster, track-only RB17. Yet regardless of its tortuous gestation, and the divorce between its parents, the Valkyrie feels like a pinnacle – and also a masterpiece."


Screenshot_2023-03-05-18-36-55-282.jpeg

*Not read it yet. But I'll certainly pour over it. Only waited what 5 years? LOL!🙂

Edit: Aston Martin Valkyrie review Aston Martin Valkyrie AMR Pro pictures. Only Gaydon!
 
Screenshot_20230305-212750.jpg
Screenshot_20230305-212806.jpg


First the picture then complete removal?

Anyway the prior text was fully copied over with no changes whatsoever. Just saying.
 
Aston Martin losses more than double to £495mn in 2022

Group hit by costs of delivering Valkyrie hypercars, foreign exchange movements and expensive debt




"Annual losses at Aston Martin more than doubled last year because of costs from delivering its Valkyrie hypercars — intended to be the fastest road car ever made — foreign exchange movements and expensive debt.

The luxury-car maker posted a pre-tax loss of £495mn for 2022, compared with £213.8mn in 2021, though the company expects to begin generating cash this year. Revenues rose 26 per cent to £1.4bn, while car sales climbed 4 per cent to 6,412.

Aston has said the profit margins it makes on each new car are higher than expected, meaning it aims to reach its target of £500mn of adjusted profit by 2025 without needing to hit 10,000 car sales, a previous condition. Shares rose 12 per cent to 225p.

The business has embarked on a turnround programme under the ownership of Lawrence Stroll, but has had to recapitalise several times, including a heavily discounted £576mn rights issue in September that made Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund a shareholder.

China’s Geely, which has tried several times to buy the company, also took a stake in the business last year.

The business will launch a new range of sports cars this year, which it believes will lead to a “significant growth in profitability” in the second half of 2023. The company expects to generate cash in 2024, and says it will be able to last until then without needing to tap investors again.

“As long as we execute on the plan we do not see any liquidity issues,” added Stroll.

Daniel Roeska, an auto analyst at Bernstein, said the company required “precision driving” over the next year to hit its targets.

“The company’s cash should be sufficient, if they can avoid delivery delays,” he added. “Overall, the company looks more in control of its destiny today than in a long time.”

Some of Aston’s financial hit last year came from the Valkyrie, its £2.5mn car that has caused a number of problems for the group.

The company collected deposits from customers years ago, and books a depreciation and amortisation cost for every model it delivers.

In addition, Aston said it delivered cars to customers whose payments it claims were stolen by two Swiss car dealers.

This cost it about £30mn last year, according to Financial Times calculations based on a breakdown of its margin impact contained in the investor presentation.

In 2021 Aston sued them, claiming they withheld more than £10mn, but said it would still deliver the cars as promised.

The two dealers in turn have sued Aston for £150mn, claiming they are owed the money for underwriting the development of the vehicle, and two more sports cars.

Aston delivered 80 Valkyries during the year, including 36 in the final quarter.

Aston’s finances have also been hit by its high interest debt — costs for this were £139mn during the year.

In total, it collected £127mn from car sales, but had a cash outflow of £299mn, including £287mn into developing its new line of sports cars.

It also booked a £156mn non-cash readjustment in the value of its dollar-denominated debt."

Nothing else.
 
I wonder if we'll ever see this go head to head to the AMG One in some way. Epic would be an understatement.
Possibly, but I wouldn't expect it to happen this year.

With the Holy Trinity we had a couple of owners who had all three and wanted to see how they compared - and I don't see a reason why a similar thing wouldn't happen with the Valkyrie and the AMG One. The only problem currently is that the AMG One deliveries only just started so it's gonna be a minute before most owners have their cars, and the Valkyrie, although many of them have been delivered, is still mostly in a broken, undrivable state and no-one knows when that's gonna be fixed. The fact that they finally provided some cars for journalists to drive seems like a positive step, but even then they mention in the Autocar review that the engine got overheated after only a couple of laps (in mild, 20-25C temperatures). So even the car that they prepped for the test drive was still not working properly.

Either way, although it would be nice to see, I don't expect it to be very epic. The Valkyrie will be almost certainly faster, but then it's much more extreme and unusable car than the One, so it's not like it's achieving some huge victory. The close results we got with the Holy Trinity were, in hindsight, quite lucky and might not be repeated for a long while.
 
Looks like someone pressed publish before the embargo was lifted. Probably won't be long now.

I've never known in my experience Autocar ever do anything like that. Still we will see. There are other tests coming, apparently.
 
I wonder if we'll ever see this go head to head to the AMG One in some way. Epic would be an understatement.

It's what all aficionados wat to see. When nobody knows but ultimately it will happen. David Coulthard might be a good bet, he's purchased both and has one of them. LOL!

But more seriously he has the skills to actually drive them to near their limits.🙂
 

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

Trending content


Back
Top