2009 Aston Martin V8 Vantage Road Test

Wed, Apr 8, 2009

Road Test

2009 Aston Martin V8 Vantage Road Test

Test Vehicle: Aston Martin Vantage 4.7L V8 with 6-speed SpeedShift Auto Gearbox

Pig ugly. What a horrible looking thing. What were they thinking?

All things that you will never hear when talking about any Aston Martin.

The V8 Vantage was introduced to the world in 2006 to partner the already achingly gorgeous DB9. It looks like a shrink wrapped version of the DB9 with the skin pulled even more tightly across the frame to give a more taut looking car. I don’t know if it’s better looking than the DB9, but it’s certainly no worse looking.

Then there’s the DB9 convertible. I can’t even talk about it. Its the most beautiful thing on 4 wheels in my opinion.

The V8 I was going to drive was a gorgeous green metallic. I believe its called Almond Green, with a great black leather interior, white stitching and a piano black finish on the center console. The car also had a gorgeous set of 20 spoke wheels which added to the taut look of the car.

Aston Martin V8 Vantage Rear

The interior was finished with a grey alcantara headliner that made the car feel a lot roomier than it actually was. It was roomier than I expected. I’m not the smallest guy in the world, but at 6’1″ I had plenty of headroom. The doors open normally but they swing slightly up so that you don’t kerb the bottoms of them when getting in – they’re called swan doors.  They work, and I wish all cars had them.

I was driving the new SpeedShift transmission with the new upgraded engine for 2009. 420hp with the flappy paddle gearbox available if you wanted it, or simply press the D button on the dashboard and let the Aston’s brain take care of the gear changes. If you get bored of the car changing gear, just pull back on one of the leather wrapped aluminum paddles, and you are in control of the gearbox. Unlike the DSG gearbox on the VW family of products, this one stays in the manual mode until you switch back to fully automatic mode by hitting the D button on the dash again, and also stays in the gear that you have selected.  Got to be careful when pulling up to the lights…

Aston Martin V8 Vantage ECU

After sliding the new crystal block into the slot in the dash instead of a key, and then press the start button, the V8 sprang into life. A low rumble let me know that this thing was ready for business. The dials look fantastic from the driver’s seat, with the rev counter and speedo seemingly etched out of a single piece of steel, and the needles swooping round in opposite directions with revs in an anticlockwise direction and speed accumulating clockwise. A large number in the middle of the two dials tells you what gear you are in.

The driving position is perfect with the seats holding you tight enough, even though they feel a little firm. The only odd thing that you have to get used to is the handbrake which is on the left side of the driver’s seat on the door sill. It’s a beautifully machined piece but you need to pull it up, and then put it down to release the brake. That will take some getting used to, but at least the thing is always in the down position. The wheel is thick but not too thick and feels nice in your hands. I wish the airbag didn’t take up so much space, but I’m sure I’ll get over that!

Aston Martin V8 Vantage Interior

A couple of blips to the throttle whetted the appetite to get this thing moving, so I pressed the D button to get the gearbox in the mood, and gently eased the throttle pedal down. The gearbox has a crawl mechanism on it that gently rolls the car forward, and I suspect will hold it on an incline start, but you have to move the throttle pedal more than you think initially to get the car engaged in first gear.

As I moved forward, the wheel felt solid in my hands with great feedback from the wheels. The car feels as taut as it looks and handles very flat. There was little to no roll into the corners and the car felt as solid as a rock. The gear changes were a little hesitant to start, with a noticeable delay in going up the box, but I am going to score that up to the fact that the car was a little cold. The warmer the oil got, the less hesitant the gears felt. I’m sure there is some technique to the throttle and paddle that I didn’t know, but it was a little jerky to start. The noise was enough though.

I got fed up with the car changing gear almost immediately, so pulled back on the left paddle, and with a little beefy blip from the engine, a surge of power pushed the car down the road. Its deceptively fast but beautifully soundtracked. I imagine that the stereo in this car will never get used. So much for Bang and Olufsen’s hard work

A sharp pull on the right paddle moves you nicely up through the box and keeps the car surging forward. It’s a wonderful feeling. When we needed to scrub a couple of MPH off, a dab of the other pedal (only two in this model) removed things fairly quickly. The brakes have a very solid feel.

Aston Martin V8 Vantage

The pull from the stop lights was a lot of fun, and looking down at the Aston wings on the wheel in front of me just made me smile. If the James Bond theme isn’t playing in your head at least once, there’s something wrong.

The engine pulls hard, and as I pushed it through a couple of tight corners, there was no body roll at all.  I would love to have opened it up a little more, but the distance between the corners was too short.

Its a wonderful sounding car, with really taut handling.  I’d rather the manual gearbox myself, but the general consensus around the industry is that the flappy paddle gearbox is the way its going.  There is no better looking line up in the industry than Aston Martin and the Vantage lives up to the mark.  I would take it as my daily driver over the 911 if I had to choose, but that would be a wonderful choice to have to make.

2009 Aston Martin V8 Vantage

Base Price: $119,500

Body: 2-door Coupe
Mechanical Orientation: Rear Wheel Drive

Engine: All alloy quad overhead cam 32 valve 4735cc V8
Power: 420 bhp (313 kW / 426 PS)
Torque: 470 Nm (346 lb.ft)
Transmission: Sportshift4 automated manual transmission (6sp)

Weight: 1630 kg (3595 lb)
Wheelbase: 2600 mm (102.5 in)
Length: 4380mm (172.5 in)
Width: 1865mm (73.5 in)
Luggage Capacity: 300 litres (10.6 cu.ft)

0-62 mph (100 km/h): 4.9 seconds
Top Speed: 180 mph (290 km/h)

For: Looks, power
Against: Nothing
Conclusion: The best looking and sounding daily driver exotic you can find.

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This post was written by:

Tim - who has written 6 posts on Car Throttle.

Founder and President of Premier Performance Group, an exotic car club in Raleigh NC. Loved cars since he was knee high to a grasshopper, and is glad to be able to share his passion for cars with his customers in NC.

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5 Comments For This Post

  1. Brian DR1665 Says:

    I hate you.

    HATE HATE HATE.

    If, whilst walking down some unnamed, sandy shoreline, I stumbled upon a magic lantern, the genie inside offering me but one wish, it would be to own an Aston Martin. Vantage, DB7, DBS – It doesn’t matter. They’re all stunning.

    Likewise, if, by some brilliant twist of fate, I won the lottery and suddenly found myself with more zeros in my bank account than I knew what to do with, my first stop after depositing the ridiculously over-sized check at the first bank I came across, would be the Aston Martin dealership.

    Bang and Olufson be damned. When an Aston Martin rolls up to a stop light next to me in my “vintage” Mitsubishi (which I truly adore), my radio goes silent. Not out of school boy curiosity, as is the case when faced with any of the newer Maseratis, but out of respect and sheer awe.

    Some would say there is no sound sweeter than a Ford V8 barking and growling through a set of Flowmasters. Others might claim the siren song of a Ferrari to be the pinnacle of automotive audibles, but they would be wrong. The mellow, yet authoritative note of the Aston Martin is all at once a symphony of power and refined style that stirs the emotions. It’s divine.

    Perhaps my first words were a bit harsh. Hope you don’t take them the wrong way. You’re a fortunate bloke, putting such a vehicle through its paces in the line of duty. Surely you can appreciate that I am as green as your Vantage at the moment.

    Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go watch the first ten minutes of “Quantum of Solace” again…

  2. sam Says:

    this thing is beautiful. one of my contacts at affluence.org plans on getting one asap… can’t wait to take it for a spin!

  3. Tony Says:

    Amazing vehicle! Thanks for your thoughts. In the supercar category I have three favorite vehicles; Aston Martin (any one of them), a Bentley Continental GT, or the Spyker C8 Aileron.

  4. Justin - YGG Says:

    Such a sweet frekain car!

  5. Automoblog.net Says:

    I reviewed one of these late last year, and absolutely fell in love. The 2008 V8 Vantage was a bit underpowered, so the HP bump to 420 was more than welcome. Here’s my review if you’re interested:

    http://www.automoblog.net/2008/12/23/2009-aston-martin-v8-vantage-review/

    I drove the same model as you, with the paddles. I liked them quite a bit with this car, since they didn’t do everything for you like a lot of the auto-manual systems. They start off in manual mode, which is how it should be. I never used full-auto on this.

    I also never turned on the stereo, like you said in the article. The engine sounds so ridiculously good, you’ll never get tired of it. I really, really liked this car. Check out my review if you want to hear some more of my thoughts on it, I don’t want this comment to drag on.

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