What is it?
The purpose of a UK first drive, according to Autocar’s long and detailed test procedure, is to discover how a car that’s already been tested in foreign parts copes with this country’s very different roads.
There’s usually a major difference between the way a model first tested in Germany, say, copes with our own peculiar cambers, corners and crowns. And of course with our variety of surfaces (usually bad) with their built-in ruts and bumps.
So let’s deal first with the dynamic stuff in the case of the Bentley Flying Spur, which we first drove in Monaco late last year. The plain fact is that this £168,000 luxury saloon, with its sophisticated three-chamber adjustable air suspension, long wheelbase, considerable weight (helpful at a time like this) and years of painstaking development copes just as well in this country as in Germany or anywhere else.
At 5.3 metres of overall length, and over 2.2 metres of width (with mirrors) it may not fit comfortably down every London suburban street, but point it at any surface, corner or combination of bumps and you can more or less guarantee it’ll cope with greater quietness, comfort or poise than anything comparable, with the single exception — perhaps — of the latest Rolls-Royce Phantom. And we’d have to test even that to be quite sure.
Left to its own devices, with its ride mode selector in “Bentley”, the wise engineers’ choice, the Spur is the closest thing you’ll find to that mythical magic carpet, absorbing bumps quietly with near-perfect body control. And it has all the silence and the interior comfort needed to complement these qualities.
However, ride comfort is far from being the full Flying Spur story. Bentley’s bag has always been multiplicity if purposes: performance is also a principal issue. This car has the sheer shove to do 207mph flat-out, if you can find the road. Courtesy of its superior 4wd traction, it can also accelerate from 0-60mph in 3.7seconds, a Ferrari-beating time.
It’ll even cope pretty well at full noise on a racetrack because the Pirellis on its optional 22-inch wheels (the standard size is 21-inch) have been chosen as much for grip and consistency at 1g cornering speeds as for mild manners in town. And that three-chamber air suspension — which uses one chamber for the firmest ride rate, all three chambers for the most compliant — has a Sport setting that more or less eliminates body roll, squat or nosedive under the most unlikely track-day use.
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Bentley Reliability
The Continental GT has been found to be the least relaible car on sale in the UK according to a recent survey. Why pay money for a make that is so poor.
Bentley Flying Spur
Very disappointed in the modern so called luxurious cars like this one. Most luxury cars today are no longer luxurious. A expensive sports car today is called a luxury car. The word luxury to me means luxurious not just expensive, with an old name taking advantage of it's past reputation. I think most modern luxury cars are over rated and overpriced for what one gets. This Bentley could be a Mercedes Maybach, a large Audi or any other big brand car name, because it no longer has the individual and uniqueness it shoud have for all the extra money they ask. Pleasde don't talk dependability to me or of fine German engineering because I won't but that kind of talk either. If you want dependability and good value for money, you can get that in a Japanese car. V12's,V8's and V6's don't impress me one bit. Modern engineering has gone behond all that juvenile stuff and we all know it. This car may be well made but it is not good value for money unless you have money to waste just to impress. The question is: Do you simply need to impress others or just yourself?
Bentley Flying Spur
Very disappointed in the modern so called luxurious cars like this one. Most luxury cars today are no longer luxurious. A expensive sports car today is called a luxury car. The word luxury to me means luxurious not just expensive, with an old name taking advantage of it's past reputation. I think most modern luxury cars are over rated and overpriced for what one gets. This Bentley could be a Mercedes Maybach, a large Audi or any other big brand car name, because it no longer has the individual and uniqueness it shoud have for all the extra money they ask. Pleasde don't talk dependability to me or of fine German engineering because I won't but that kind of talk either. If you want dependability and good value for money, you can get that in a Japanese car. V12's,V8's and V6's don't impress me one bit. Modern engineering has gone behond all that juvenile stuff and we all know it. This car may be well made but it is not good value for money unless you have money to waste just to impress. The question is: Do you simply need to impress others or just yourself?