DBS Top Gear - short test: Aston Martin DBS Volante


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Kraftwagen König
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It's a fair question: why, Aston, would you go to all the effort of stiffening, strengthening and lightening the DB9 Coupe to turn it into the hardcore DBS (yes, that's the Bond car, let's get it out the way now)... and then go and cut the roof off to create the DBS Volante? Because of the noise, that's why. More than the speed, more than the impressively nimble handling, that's what this car is all about: monstrous, glorious, technicolour noise.
It's the sort of sound that brings you out in goose pimples and excessive simile: roof down, rebounding off drystone hedges, it's like being sat in the centre of a orchestra, a bassy, brassy growl at low revs, climbing to a full-strings-and-woodwinds crescendo as you pummel the V12 towards 7,000rpm.

And yes, OK, let's mention the fastness. Because the DBS Volante has a lot of it: 4.3 seconds to 60mph, a top speed of 191mph and more mid-range torque than you could ever reasonably use without a deluge of letters from Her Majesty's on your doorstep a few days later. That 510bhp, 6.0-litre engine is unmodified from the DBS coupe, and it's a beauty: tractable and relaxed when you need it to be, blood-curdling when you floor it.
For something that's so... so bloody big and front-engined and open-topped, the DBS Volante handles. Aston says the DBS's tub is so stiff that, even with the roof cut off, it didn't require any extra reinforcement - which means the convertible weighs just 115kg more than the coupe. And though the chassis is some 25 less rigid than the DBS Coupe, there's no more than the merest hint of flex. You'll need to be pushing on at such a rate to find it that you'll be in very real danger of destroying major geographical landmarks if you get it wrong.

The DBS Volante isn't perfect. The giant gearlever - nicked off an Astra VXR, surely? - is still too big and clunky to flick between gears easily. Unless you've fitted the rear seat baffle, there's a lot of buffeting above 60mph or so (at 191mph, I can only presume, your face will be inexorably sucked down the back of the driver's seat). And, though the new Bang & Olufsen stereo is astonishing, the pair of dashboard-mounted tweeters are so shiny that they strobe streetlights straight into your face. Small gripes, but at £172,000, small gripes are important.

And then there's the big one: the one about whether the DBS Volante makes any sense. On one level, maybe not: if you want ‘the fast Aston', it's got to be the DBS Coupe. If you're after a drop-top, the DBS Volante costs 50 per cent more than the DB9 Volante: it isn't 50 per cent more car (not, for a second, that it will deter the DBS's likely buyers: expect the waiting list to read like a who's who of footballers who've recently renegotiated contracts).

But hell, why do we have to justify it rationally? The DBS Volante feels special: beautiful, unique, flawed and, above all, magnificently noisy. It is, and that's all that matters.

Sam Philip


Aston Martin DBS Volante full road test car review - BBC Top Gear - BBC Top Gear



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Wow....I'm really coming around to the idea of a topless DBS, the coupe being the best looking production car in the world. World's Best Convertible? Well if it isn't, it sure does frame the argument.....SL63, Gallardo Spyder and DBS Volante...take your pick. It must be wonder to be rich and just have them all.


M
 

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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