We expect a lot of modern GTs: that their handling is sports car-like and their body control taut, but also that they’re relaxing and long-legged on a long trip, as well as refined and luxurious.
That they must also bristle with charm and be an unmistakable driver’s car – at least when we’re talking about a big Aston Martin – means you end up with an impossible list of attributes to satisfy perfectly.
Gaydon has wisely tended to aim for a position slightly off-centre with its DB cars – to make them bigger and better on pace, sporting allure and driver engagement than the competition, while settling for good but not outstanding scores in the driver engagement than the competition, while settling for good but not outstanding scores in the silken-edged departments where its rivals at Bentley and Mercedes are habitually strong.
In some ways Aston has clearly settled with that compromise here, but in other ways it has made the car an unmistakably more complete and competitive GT than any in its history.
The ride is extraordinarily good. Cycling through GT, S and S+ modes brings ever-firmer response from the car’s Bilstein adaptive dampers, but it’s the first of those modes that lends the car the amazing breadth of dynamic ability you’ll want from it most of the time.