What is it?
The Aston Martin Vanquish Volante, the range-topping cabriolet we tried in California last year. That means we get the same 6.0-litre V12 engine and the same carbonfibre-skinned body and triple-skinned hood, only now they're under the battleship grey skies of home.
Don't underestimate the effect of a change in backdrop. This is an extravagantly styled and proportioned car. Under the high contrast daylight of the US's west coast, one would imagine practically any paint scheme working; on a wet weekday in Warwickshire, it's a different story.
Tonsil-red bodywork and white leather are a rather more brazen mix than feels appropriate in between the skip lorries on the Fosse Way. Clearly, when shelling out almost £200k on a convertible Aston Martin, there is an element of 'look at me' about the purchase, but we'd advise caution when playing with colour samples – the Volante's many ducts, vents, spoilers and chins leave it susceptible to obvious gaudiness.
Trimmed more tastefully, the cabin is a predictably superior environment. The new centre stack – derived from the One-77's – is a significant step up from the Vantage's version, both in form and function. Technically, the car is a 2+2, but the tiny rear seats aren't going to permit you to enjoy the full-grain leather with more more than one companion. There ought to be enough room for a weekend's worth of luggage, though. Aston says the 279-litre boot has expanded by 50 per cent over the previous DBS.
What's it like?
An incredibly expensive oversize watch: big to look at, consider and weigh in your hand, but not necessarily to wear. Aston's unmistakably sturdy control weights suit the Volante well and don't necessarily make it cumbersome to shunt about.
The steering is meaty and moderately quick, the adaptive ride adamantly firm without being insistent and it takes huge portions of the accelerator’s travel before the languorous V12’s funny bone is finally tickled. There's no brain scrambling rapidity to the engine's 565bhp delivery, underpinned as it is by nearly two tonnes of Aston. Instead, the rate of knots builds handsomely with an ever-deepening low growl.
Sport mode, pinged into action with some button pushing, ups the responsiveness and the volume, but the smooth-shifting six-speed Touchtronic – a proper automatic in place of the Vantage S's frustrating Sportshift – still appeals most when held at a lusty canter and tapping a rich seam of burble that masquerades as a midrange.
That attitude plays to the car’s strengths. Truth be told, the Vanquish isn’t the most compelling car in Aston’s line-up. Its capabilities are more than a match for most prudent road speeds, but the playful limit of the riotous V12 Vantage S is swapped for a broader stability in this bigger GT.
Perhaps most Volante buyers won’t mind that. They might, however, take issue with the gentle fidget around the fringes of the newly topless shell. Aston has made much of its first fully carbonfibre-skinned car, but one only has to look at the quivering rear-view mirror to get a sense of the torsional stresses being displaced.
Sympathetic damping prevents this upgrading to actual annoyance, however, and beneath its triple-skin fabric roof the Volante feels like an entirely usable prospect – were any buyer actually interested in using it every day. Most won’t be, though, and therein lies the niggle.
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I find Astons soo boring and
£200,00 !!! you d have to be mad, really, you would, you could get the same thing for £150,00 less if you just bought an F-type, still in this market I spose the customers have more money than sense.
I never thought I'd say this....
There was a time when I'd jump on a new Aston Martin review, but for this one, I've actually waited 2 days before bothering to read it and even then, I've scrolled straight down to the 'Should I buy one' section'. Sad really.
Is there any need...