Currently reading: Aston Martin DB7 | Used Car Buying Guide

The Aston Martin DB7 first featured in our weekly magazine nearly 25 years ago but it has never looked a better buy than now. We explain how to get one

The DB7 is such a bargain that it’s cheaper even than an Aston Martin Cygnet, the company’s gentrified Toyota iQ.

An example of Aston’s city car, a 2011/61-plate with 52,000 miles, is being pedalled for £24,890, but right now, you can slide into a 1996/N-reg DB7 3.2 coupé with 69,000 miles for as little as £19,995. That’s cheaper than a new Ford Focus, never mind a posh iQ. Of course, the trouble with a lazy comparison like that is that strings – usually expensive ones – are attached. The DB7 is no exception.

See Aston Martin DB7 for sale on PistonHeads 

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The earliest ones are now 23 years old (the model ran from 1994 to 2004) and body and chassis corrosion is not uncommon. Amazingly, earlier cars had better rust-proofing than later ones. Engine and gearbox cooling systems are fragile. Timing chain tensioners can fail, taking the engine with them. The air-conditioning system is troublesome and costs a fortune to put right, because it can involve removing the dashboard.

All these problems and more are detailed in ‘Buyer beware’ below, so check out and compare as many DB7s as you can before putting any money down, especially since the car was largely hand built and production and rust-proofing standards varied.

As for pricing, expect a clean, average-mileage 3.2 to cost around £30,000 and a later, same-condition 5.9 around £40,000. That’s right: there are two engines to get excited about, a Jaguar 3.2-litre straight six producing 335bhp with the help of an Eaton supercharger (it’s known as the i6), and a naturally aspirated Ford Cosworth 5.9-litre V12 with 420bhp.

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Today, we’re used to bigger engined versions of new cars arriving first, but the DB7 was launched in 3.2-litre form and the 5.9-litre replaced it in 1999. You won’t want to mash the accelerator pedal on any DB7 you find, but for either engine, expect 0-60mph in the mid-fives.

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With the V12 came a new name: DB7 Vantage. This model also had larger, more powerful brakes, which it’s possible to fit to a 3.2 variant using a company such as Trinity Engineering.

The other ‘V’ in the line-up was the Volante convertible, launched in 1996. It had a stiffened body but softer suspension than the coupé. These suspension settings were adopted by the 3.2 coupé from the middle of 1996, when it became known as the Series 2.

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Much has been made of the DB7’s Jaguar XJS origins but it’s nothing to get hung up about, and certainly not anywhere in the same order as an iQ/ Cygnet. From its launch, everyone agreed the DB7 was a genuine Aston, perhaps not the driver’s car we’d been promised but sufficiently classy, powerful and beautiful to wear the Aston badge.

That much was clear when the sharper, limited-edition DB7 Vantage GT manual emerged in 2002 with 435bhp. (The GTA automatic remained at 420bhp). A 2003/03-reg GTA with 50,000 miles is about £49,000. You don’t need an iQ to know which is the better car. 

An expert's view...

MATT FRANKLIN, MCGURK PERFORMANCE CARS

“It’s not a question of ‘shall I have an Aston Martin DB9 or DB7?’ The two cars are very different and anyone who asks that will, after they’ve driven both, probably go for the more modern DB9, which is a better car all round. Instead, most people who want a DB7 deliberately set out to buy one, whether for its looks, or for what it means to Aston Martin as the car that made the next chapter in the company’s history possible, or because you can buy a good one for less than £30,000. Prices of the rarer manual cars are rising. The best buys for future collectability are the special editions such as the GTA and Keswick. Be wary of anything with more than 100,000 miles.”

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Aston Martin DB7 problems

ENGINE 

On the i6 engine, check the exhaust manifold hasn’t cracked and the engine oil and gearbox coolers aren’t leaking. The V12 suffers misfiring due to failed pencil coils and over-fuelling at low speeds due to faulty injectors. The V12’s radiator thermostat fails, causing overheating issues.

Check the V12’s cooling system was overhauled. Original hoses collapsed on the inside. The Eaton supercharger on the i6 may whine: check its oil and coolant have been changed. Timing chain rattles mean the tensioners are failing. 

TRANSMISSION

Gearbox wiring harness on the i6 chafes on the body and ’box, causing gear change problems, and the V12’s system can suffer coolant leaks into the gearbox, wrecking it. 

BRAKES AND SUSPENSION 

V12’s brakes are strong but expensive to service. Both models can pull to the left and need expert four-wheel geometry attention. Front top-mount bushes wear quickly. 

BODY 

Rust is common at the sill ends near the rear wheel arches. The floor rusts at both footwells. Rust develops behind the front shock absorbers and on front suspension top mounts.

INTERIOR 

Air-con evaporator fails behind the dashboard and is hugely expensive to fix. The combined window motor and regulator can fail (£1500 for new parts plus labour). Check the seat latches aren’t broken.

Also worth knowing...

You might want to consider giving your DB7 solid-gold protection — something like Aston’s choice of ‘pre-owned vehicle’ warranties. Premium is for cars up to 15 years old and Classic covers cars older than 15 years.

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Aston Martin DB7 Prices

£19,000-£24,999 

Early 3.2 coupés, some over 100k miles, others 60k to 90k and with good histories. Also, the occasional early 5.9.

£25,000-£27,999 

More 5.9s showing with around 70k miles, plus lowish-mileage 3.2s. 

£27,000-£32,999 

Take your pick of some very nice 50k-mile 3.2 coupés. 

£33,000-£36,999 

Very smart late-plate 5.9 coupés, first of the early 3.2 Volantes (£33k) and even a V12 GTA. 

£37,000-£45,999 

Many more Volantes at this money plus the best 5.9 coupés.

John Evans 

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streaky 7 August 2017

Rust proofing

"Amazingly, earlier cars had better rust-proofing than later ones" because,apparently, Aston stopped bothering to underseal later versions - unforgivable!

jer 7 August 2017

When these first launched

I thought it had amazing style (I thought he same about the Rover SD1 as a little 'un). Still is nice but the growth of wheel arch proportions and trends in rake and surfacing have dated it. Any real designers on this site that can shime some light on how design preferences change over time? 

Greenracer 7 August 2017

For the money Aston Martin

For the money Aston Martin wanted you to pay when new, these cars seem to have quality issues. The 'hand-built' line doesn't mean that you get a car that will last for years. Now if you really want to own one of these, you still get your wallet emptied just for repairs and parts. It's a car I'd rather watch someone else drive !