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blue8
10-19-2007, 09:09 AM
CAR Magazine:
http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_1_560px.jpg

I know Bond drove it last year but what’s all the fuss about? It’s a DB9 with a bodykit isn’t it?
Steady on. The DBS is certainly based on the DB9 but then so is the DBR9 racer that won the GT1 class at Le Mans in 2007. And you wouldn’t find anyone kicking sand in its face.

Aston says the DBS is a very different car in character to both the DB9 and also the older Vanquish whose place the DBS effectively takes in the range – even if Aston reckons we shouldn’t see them as like-for-like.

http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_2_560px.jpg
ut there’s more to it than war paint, right?
Right. But lets look at that war paint first: flared arches, aggressive front splitter, bonnet scoops, side skirts and a serious piece of carbon acting as a rear diffuser. You may prefer the more demure lines of the DB9 original, but you can’t deny that the DBS is a seriously handsome car with real road presence.

And so to the stuff underneath that make-up. The bonnet, bootlid, wings and doors are made from carbonfibre, shaving 30kg of the total kerbweight and standard carbon brakes, the first on an Aston road car, shed another 12.5kg. In total, the 1695kg DBS weighs 65kg less than a DB9.

http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_3_560px.jpg
But it’s the same V12 engine
Yes, but reworked with bigger inlet ports and a higher 10.9:1 compression ratio to lift power from 450bhp to 510bhp. Torque remains the same at 420lb ft and is directed through the same six-speed Graziano manual ’box and out to the rear wheels via a shorter 3.71:1 final drive.

It pulls hard from as low as 1500rpm in sixth gear and sings lustily through an exhaust system incorporating Aston’s usual trick bypass valves. But even with the valves open as the revs pass 3500rpm, the music is never obtrusive.

http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_4_560px.jpg
So with all that power and without all that weight it’s got to be a 200mph supercar...
Er, not quite. Will you settle for 191mph? That’s 5mph more than you’d be able to coax from a regular DB9 and the 0-62mph sprint falls from 4.7sec to 4.3sec. Not slow, but Ferrari’s 599 (similar layout and price) offers over 600bhp and hits 62mph in just 3.7sec.

The DBS feels quick, clearly, but not shatteringly so. What strikes more is the amount of torque on offer, the kick in the back at mid-range speeds being far beyond what the spec-sheet suggests.

http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_5_560px.jpg
So how does it drive?
Like an Aston should. It’s refined, focused and fun with accurate, well weighted steering and the balance to let you play hero with the DSC switched out – although Dr Bez would rather you didn’t. But it’s maybe not the track special you were expecting. No bad thing, we say. Lambo’s Superleggera looks sensational and is sensational on a circuit, but suffers seriously compromised road manners as a consequence.

Aston wants the DBS to feel at home on any road so has fitted adaptable dampers which can be switched between two positions via a console button. As with most cars so equipped, the harder sport setting is just too stiff for anything but the smoothest roads, so you’ll tend to stick with the standard setting. Which works fine until you really start to pile on the pressure. There’s just slightly too much float at higher speed. Aston knows this and is currently discussing whether to tighten the standard setting fractionally.

The brakes certainly need no such fettling. The 398mm/360mm carbon stoppers are as big on feel as they are on reverse thrust. They're possibly the DBS’s stand-out feature.

http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_6_560px.jpg
Will I feel like Bond inside?
Emotionally? I couldn’t say. But you’ll certainly know that you’re not slumming it in a basic DB9 if that’s what you mean. There’s the ludicrously named but funky-looking Emotion Control Unit (it’s a posh key), the option of piano black for the centre console which feature some new knobs and, outside of North America, the option to save an extra 20kg by ditching the standard seats for some carbon-backed buckets.

Don’t worry though North Americans – you’ll not notice the 20kg difference and the standard chairs look and feel almost as supportive.

http://www.carmagazine.co.uk/images/article_images/DBSdrive_7_560px.jpg
Verdict
Those expecting some kind of Scuderia/RS/Superleggera DB9 might be disappointed, but we can’t see many customers feeling the same even after forking out £160,000 to get behind the wheel. They know they’re buying Bond’s car and the most exclusive car Aston makes and that will be enough.

Aston’s new range-topper is an accomplished GT that – with a little tweaking – will be suited for any tarmac ribbon from B-road to race circuit. There are faster rivals, more overtly sporting rivals, but the DBS is the most useable.

However for those who find the butch styling a little gauche, take heart in the knowledge that the brilliant and beautiful DB9 Sport Pack looks like a genuine bargain at £40k less. That's a very tempting proposition...

Rating: 4 out of 5

Classic Driver:
http://www.classicdriver.com/upload/images/_uk/13568/img01.jpg
Classic Driver first published photographs of the new DBS in May 2006. Since then, the car has played centre-stage in the latest Bond film, and toured the world’s shows and events. Yet no journalist had driven a production car on the road - until earlier this week. Classic Driver was one of the very first publications to test the latest flagship model from Aston Martin, and try to ascertain its place in the supercar market, the differences over the existing DB9 range, and compare and contrast the latest car from Gaydon with the last from Newport Pagnell: the 200mph+ Vanquish.

So many questions, but fortunately a generous amount of time behind the wheel of the DBS on nearly-deserted roads in the Lot valley in south-western France provided answers to most, if not all of them.

It’s a handsome machine. Seeing it for the first time in an everyday environment (okay, it was a 5-star chateau but let’s be honest, that is going to be familiar territory for the £160,000 GT), it does look different from the DB9. It’s more muscular with its 20" wheels and widened front and rear track, all set under bodywork that includes a high proportion of carbonfibre, and with some scoops and aerodynamic addenda that signal the car’s sporting purpose.

Let’s stop here a moment - sporting purpose? Is it a track-day special, a lightened DB9 incorporating many of the lessons learned at Le Mans? The initial photos gave that impression sure enough; all black Alcantara, carbonfibre and diamond-pattern stitching. The reality is that it’s quite a few steps removed from that, and no different from a similarly specified Ferrari 599. The roof, bonnet and boot are carbon, and it also has an exposed rear diffuser and front splitter in the same composite material. And while some sections of the cabin are in (matt-finish) natural black carbonfibre, the effect is more Monte Carlo than Mulsanne.

The lower ride, wide Pirelli P Zero tyres and enhanced side sills seem to suck the car to the ground - even before it’s in motion. It’s a modern, dynamic sporting look with the right degrees of light and shade in styling to give the DBS attributes that Dr Bez describes as "on one extreme very sporty, and on the other very sensitive and muscular".

The cabin will be reasonably familiar to DB9 and V8 owners, although the big difference is a totally new centre console with much clearer controls and instrumentation. The rev-counter and speedometer have been likewise simplified and improved for clarity of vision, and both of these improvements will inevitably filter down to the rest of the Aston Martin family next year. ‘Matrix Alloy’ finish is standard for the metal parts of the console, with ‘Piano Black’ an option on most of the test cars.

North American drivers will miss out on one of the new car’s strongest features - the lightweight one-piece carbonfibre/Kevlar buckets that are super-comfortable yet very supportive. I hold up my hand as a harsh critic of Aston Martin seats across the range in the past, but this time the company has done a superb job. Sadly, due to the Federal regulations requiring a separately adjustable backrest, they won’t be available in the US. Meanwhile, there are no rear seats, just a simple luggage shelf.

Starting is via the car’s ‘ECU’. That’s the ‘Emotional Control Unit’, by the way; a chunky metal and polished-sapphire lozenge more akin to a luxury sporting watch than a humble ‘key’. It does sound a little camp, but the way it works is that you slip it into the ‘lock’ mid-dash, press it in all of the way (with your foot completely depressing the clutch), and after a short systems check the 510bhp, 5935cc V12 bursts into life with a Vanquish-esque roar that soon dies to an imperceptible purr at tickover.

The engine is from the DB9 family, but has a higher compression ratio of 10.9:1 (as against 10.3:1 for the DB9) and produces a lot more power with its 510bhp @ 6,500rpm (versus 450bhp, although torque remains the same at 570Nm, albeit achieved at higher revs).

On the move, the DBS feels like a relatively big car but the lighter weight/improved power formula soon makes itself felt as the new Aston Martin responds to any input of braking, steering or acceleration with an alacrity far better than any other car in the manufacturer’s range.

The steering is well-weighted, and the car can be ‘thought’ through a corner with a good amount of power loading up the front wheels nicely, but retaining neutral handling with a high level of grip. A lot of this is down to the completely new, two-setting, Adaptive Damping System (ADS). Start the car and the default is ‘Normal’, which handled bumpy French D-roads better than many less performance-focused cars, the ‘softer’ (and you have to use the word loosely here) setting providing tremendous traction out of slow corners and over undulating roads.

Within this setting (and also in ‘Track’) there are five levels of damping, each fine-tuned by an electronic control unit taking its readings from the car’s systems, such as throttle and brake positions, vehicle speed and steering wheel rotation. ‘Track’ gives you firmer damping instantly - it’s very clever and easily discerned through the seat - and is the optimum configuration for really fast road and track work. Yet you can still knock the speed right off through a French hamlet - forgetting to switch back to ‘Normal’ - and the ride does not cripple you. It’s very impressive.

As are the new CCM (Carbon Composite Material) brakes. These are another first for Aston Martin and will not be available on the DB9 or V8 Vantage due to the bespoke installation, requiring major airflow management changes to ensure enough cooling air is supplied to the 398mm front, 360mm rear, vented discs. The braking performance is phenomenal (60-0mph is 10% better than the DB9) and will last over a long run through Alpine passes. The best thing about the new Brembo CCM system is its feel - you can ‘caress’ the pedal and there’s no grinding or grating, it’s all very smooth and sophisticated and not at all ‘track day’.

The engine feels a lot more free-spinning than in the DB9 and Vanquish, while the exhaust has an evocative timbre but is not contrived. At 3,500-4,000rpm the motor begins to open up with an encouraging note but is so flexible it will pull from 1,500rpm all the way to its cut-out at 7,000rpm or so. I was hitting the rev-limiter a few times, and that was due to a combination of youthful enthusiasm and, one of the car’s few flaws, a badly positioned gearlever that could really do with moving a hand’s breadth further forward. This is an issue with the other manual cars in the range but seemed to manifest itself more in the DBS, possibly due to its more ‘up and at ’em’ mien.

What, no sequential shift and paddles behind the wheel like Ferrari and Maserati? Aston Martin is coy about future developments; with production planned at just 500 units a year (leading to a two-year wait in some parts of the world), they don’t need to fill any perceived gap in the market. However, there was a ‘watch this space’ hanging in the air at the launch regarding transmission options for the future. We’ll see, but in my opinion installing the ‘Sportshift’ system used in the V8 Vantage would make this car nigh-on perfect.

Nigh-on perfect? Price aside, it’s the best car from Gaydon by far and worth the extra £45k over a DB9 (although I’d like to drive a Sports Pack manual side-by-side) just for its driving dynamics and exclusivity. At £160,000 in the UK, comparisons will be drawn with the Ferrari 599 GTB in its most standard form (no CCM brakes, F1 gearbox or big wheels, and still more expensive), another V12 with a peerless badge and comfortable continental cruising capability.

That would be an unfair comparison because with an extra 100bhp the Italian car will pull (not ‘run’...) away from the DBS at really big speeds. Across country, at slightly more sensible velocities I think the two will be more evenly matched.

And the Vanquish, the first - and so far only - Aston Martin to crack 200mph? A fantastic machine, and something that encapsulates all the majesty and bespoke finishing of car production at Newport Pagnell. If you’ve just bought an Ultimate Edition Vanquish S you can sleep at night - it’s an alternative, appealing to different tastes.

Dr Bez was bubbling with enthusiasm for the new car - despite suffering from what appeared to be early-onset pneumonia - and recognises his customer-base: those who want a car that does not shout ‘Here I am!’. He feels that the DBS "has a different character, but has the DNA of an Aston".

I wouldn’t disagree.

http://www.classicdriver.com/upload/images/_uk/13568/img04.jpg
The Aston Martin DBS will be available in the UK at a price around £160,000, including such features as HDD satellite navigation, CCM brakes, memory seats (carbonfibre sports seats are a no-cost option) as standard. Any colour from the Aston Martin range can be specified although early production will be concentrated on the three special DBS metallic colours: Casino Ice (dark grey), Storm Black and Lightning Silver (light silver). Deliveries to customers will start in December 2007.

Photo gallery: http://www.classicdriver.com/uk/magazine/3200.asp?id=13569

davide
10-19-2007, 10:19 AM
It's gorgeous !!

Ghostbat
10-19-2007, 10:23 AM
Looks sublime in silver.

AlfaGTV
10-19-2007, 12:48 PM
Deliveries to customers will start in December 2007.


Hmmm, already saw one in Francorchamps a couple of weeks ago.
Very nice car.
http://www.e40racer.be/spa6h07.php?dir=&offset=80

ae86_16v
10-19-2007, 12:54 PM
Yeah seriously, that car looks soooooo good. :D

AlfaGTV
10-19-2007, 06:24 PM
Yep yep that's the one :)

blue8
10-23-2007, 04:33 PM
Be James Bond at 191 mph
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com/media/roadtests/firstdrive/2008/aston.martin.dbs/08.astonmartin.dbs.340.jpg
Vehicle Tested:
2008 Aston Martin DBS 2dr Coupe

First Impressions:
Charismatic and capable, the DBS is both faster and more refined than a DB9

Low, sleek and yet self-consciously aggressive, the 2008 Aston Martin DBS is the ultimate expression of the contemporary Aston Martin.

Featured Specs

* 510-hp 5.9-liter V12
* Six-speed manual transmission
* Carbon-fiber body panels
* 191-mph top speed

With the farewell to the hand-built Vanquish last summer, the DBS has become the corporate face of a newly independent Aston Martin. Sold earlier this year by its former parent Ford to an investment group fronted by David Richards, the chief executive of Prodrive, Aston Martin will now have to make its own way in a world where Audi, Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz and a clutch of small independent companies are all fighting for the attention of the new group of millionaires across the globe.

The 2008 Aston Martin DBS is the car that Aston CEO Dr. Ulrich Bez describes as "thunder and lightning." Aston Martin must achieve the prestige of Ferrari to survive as an influential manufacturer of sports cars, and that means the DBS must measure up against the Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano.

A Surprising Start
For the DBS, Aston Martin presents you with a plastic controller topped with a crystal, described as an ECU — Emotion Control Unit. (Well, it'll be stainless steel and a sapphire if you actually pay the $265,000.) It slots into the center of the starter button, which then glows warmly red as the 5,935cc V12 comes to life.

This is the same Ford-designed engine featured in the DB9, still assembled by hand in Cologne, Germany. It's been slightly revised for the DBS, and the changes include a taller 10.9:1 compression ratio and a bypass valve in the intake tract that opens at 5,500 rpm to admit more air into the engine at peak rpm. The upshot of this is a 60-horsepower hike in power from the DB9's 450-hp calibration to 510 hp at 6,500 rpm. The torque output remains unchanged at 420 pound-feet, available at 5,750 rpm.

The deep, rich tone from the V12 engine is instantly familiar, now a signature of Aston Martin. Reach out for the shift lever of the six-speed manual transmission (an automated sequential manual will be available later), and slot into 1st gear. The shift action is heavy, as you would expect from a rear-mounted transaxle required to process so much power, yet it's precise and manageable, while the clutch action is light and linear. The DBS might be powerful, but it's not intimidating.

This is a surprise. Since the DBS's first appearance in Casino Royale, the 2006 James Bond film, and then its official unveiling at the 2007 Pebble Beach Concours d' Elegance, Dr. Bez has been telling anyone who'll listen that the DBS would be a raw-edged road racer. But you'd never believe it after driving this car, as the use of an active suspension with five-way electronically adjustable dampers delivers a low-speed ride that's dramatically better than that of a DB9. Aston's engineers also quietly admit that they've learned a lot about filtering out unwanted road noise in the marque's all-aluminum chassis, so it's no wonder the DBS improves so much on the DB9.

Delving Deeper
Aston has indulged in some weight-conscious engineering for the DBS. The trunk lid, hood and front fenders are now made from carbon fiber, helping the DBS shave some 176 pounds from the bonded all-aluminum body structure it shares with the DB9, so now it weighs 3,737 pounds. A shorter final-drive ratio of 3.71:1 also accentuates the feeling of speed built into the DBS.

If you look at the raw performance numbers recorded by Aston Martin, the DBS falls a long way short of the Ferrari 599. Whereas the DBS cracks 100 km/h (62 mph) in 4.3 seconds on the way to a top speed of 191 mph, the 611-hp Ferrari manages 3.7 seconds to the same benchmark and a top speed of 205 mph. But this is rather like saying that one Bond girl is marginally prettier than another.

In the real world, the DBS feels hugely rapid. Helped by all that torque, the Aston pulls cleanly from very low rpm — 30 mph in 6th gear is no problem — before the revs build with a crescendo of increasing ferocity, making a subtle change in pitch as the bypass intake performs its trick at 5,500 rpm. The rush of power is so smooth and so linear that it's easy to find yourself hitting the rev limiter at 6,800 rpm.

Aston collaborated with Brembo to develop a brake system with ceramic rotors for the DBS. The front rotors measure 15.7 inches and have six-pot calipers, and the 14.2-inch rear rotors use four-pot calipers. The use of the lightweight rotors reduces weight by 26.5 pounds, and they work exceptionally well, providing strong, consistent performance with a pleasing amount of feel.

Getting the Bends
The DBS achieves that neat trick of feeling smaller and nimbler the harder you push it. The steering is much better than a DB9's. It's lighter, more precise and more communicative, allowing you to place the car with greater confidence. Our only criticism is a rattle through the steering column that afflicted all the test cars we tried.

The electronic damper system is controlled by a switch on the center console and offers both Normal and Track modes. The car will then automatically select an appropriate setting from within these parameters. As a result, the DBS can combine a supple low-speed ride with aggressive damping on smooth high-speed surfaces. It works well, but the settings sometimes feel too different, so you end up fidgeting between a setup that's marginally too soft and one that's uncomfortably firm. Might an interim Sport setting solve this problem?

This criticism, though, should not be overstated. The DBS deserves its place in the supercar club.

The Aesthetics
In many ways, the DBS's appearance is proving its most controversial aspect. According to Marek Reichmann, the car's designer, "The DBS is the evolution of the DB9 into a true performance car. It's like taking an athlete who's already good at what they do and sticking them in the gym for even longer, getting them really toned. It's about conveying the passion of power."

To convey this passion, Reichmann has lowered and widened the DB9's silhouette and added all manner of swoops, scoops and slashes, including a large rear aero diffuser. Most, no doubt, have an aerodynamic benefit and they give the car a more aggressive attitude, but the overall effect has — whisper it — a whiff of the aftermarket. You can't help thinking this is how an upmarket tuner might have reinterpreted the DB9. For a company that has stated its desire to make art cars with an understated elegance, the DBS is a surprising volte-face.

Within the cabin, the swooping curves of the fascia are instantly familiar from the V8 Vantage and DB9, but the switchgear on the center console is new. Simple rotary knobs, silver buttons and a joystick replace the chaotic control ergonomics of the DB9, although the multifarious buttons still require some acclimatization before you know what they're about.

In Europe, customers are offered handsome and immensely comfortable sport seats made from carbon fiber that weigh 10 pounds less than the standard items. But they can't accommodate an occupant sensor and therefore fall afoul of U.S. airbag regulations. Instead, North America must make do with the standard chairs, which are bulky enough to consume precious cabin space, especially for tall drivers.

The DBS is designed strictly for two, with the cubbies behind the front seats supplementing the useful trunk. If you want to increase the car's practicality further, you can even order a bespoke saddle that straddles the transmission tunnel and houses all manner of modern detritus. Nice.

Up to the Challenge?
About a thousand or so people have preordered the $265,000 2008 Aston Martin DBS, so it's already a success, a measure of the dramatic increase in sales the company has experienced over the last few years.

The DBS is also the best car that Aston Martin makes (alongside the V8 Vantage, of course): intriguing, capable and charismatic. This augurs well for the company's future. But the question lies in just how far the present Aston Martin formula can take the company in its bid for ongoing desirability against companies like Ferrari.

The 2008 Aston Martin DBS is some kind of high-water mark in the company's fortunes so far, yet we'll all be watching to see if the company can continue its remarkable resurgence without the financial support of Ford.

Edmunds attended a manufacturer-sponsored event, to which selected members of the press were invited, to facilitate this report.

http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do/Drives/FirstDrives/articleId=123088

chest3r
10-23-2007, 05:34 PM
The car is f*ckin gorgeous. Period. Probably the best looking car of the moment. It adds a lot of aggressiveness to the AM usual design wich is great. But there's one thing I can't understand.... If this model is suppose to be the new Vanquish, why it's just a DB9 with a few upgrades ?? It should be called DB9 something..... like the Scuderia or RS, etc...

If the V8 Vantage, DB9 and DBS will be the models in the AM lineup, it will be really hard for a common person to tell the differences between them. And the Panamera rival is on it's way... and guess what... it looks exactly like a DB9.....

chest3r
10-23-2007, 06:34 PM
^^ Better that way 8)

79TA
10-23-2007, 07:25 PM
neeeed Aston . . .