RE: New Aston Martin Vantage gets huge power boost

RE: New Aston Martin Vantage gets huge power boost

Monday 12th February

New Aston Martin Vantage gets huge power boost

Updated interior is the highlight - but this will almost certainly be the quickest road-going Vantage of all time...


We know that car prices have risen hard in the last few years, but power outputs seem to have soared even quicker. The freshly revised Aston Martin Vantage is very stylish proof of the trend. We don’t have finalised pricing yet, but company insiders say to expect it to be around the £165,000 mark - so £20,000 more than the outgoing Vantage F1 Edition. This is a sizeable increase - although the one on the other side of the bang-per-buck scale is even bigger: the Vantage is now going to be making 656hp from its AMG V8. 

For perspective, that’s a huge 128hp more than the F1 Edition made from its own AMG donk. Going further back, it means the new Vantage has 276hp more than the 4.3-litre Vantage that launched in 2005. Given that the Bank of England’s official inflation calculator reckons that Vantage’s £79,995 price tag would be £136,000 in today’s deflated pounds, the supplement being asked over that for the new car represents pretty good value for what is a 72 per cent increase in horsepower.

Of course, few people are likely to be cross-shopping the brand-new Vantage against a 19-year-old example, so a more relevant comparison is with the wider market. Where the 2025 Vantage has leapfrogged cars including the AMG GT 63 - which uses the same base engine - and even the mighty Porsche 911 Turbo S. Yet while both of those rivals use all-wheel drive, the Aston still directs its entire output through its rear axle. Well before driving it, we already know the Vantage is going to be an absolute beast. 

Although the new V8 shares its capacity and AMG bloodline with the outgoing Vantage’s it has been given numerous upgrades to deliver the power increase. The most obvious is new turbos, but we’re also told it has a heavily revised top end as well as the cooling improvements detailed below. As well as the headline power figure, torque has risen substantially too – with 590lb ft available from 2,750rpm to 6,000rpm the 2025 Vantage has 85lb ft more than the 2024 version.

As with the DB12, the Vantage has now been given a shorter final drive to improve acceleration through its standard eight-speed ZF autobox; there will never be another manual Vantage. Aston is quoting a 3.4-second 0-60mph time and a 202mph top speed for the Coupe, that acceleration number identical to the one claimed for the limited-run 2022 V12 Vantage. We will be surprised if the turned-up V8 doesn’t prove itself to be considerably quicker when unleashed in the real world, and the fastest road-going Vantage ever. Even though it has 34hp less than the V12 it has 35lb ft more, and is 190kg lighter on Aston’s numbers. 

Not that there are big exterior changes to sell the huge increase in thrust. Aston’s argument is that Vantage buyers already loved the way the car looked, and so the changes are both limited and carefully considered. The most obvious is at the front of the car, with the new Vantage getting redesigned LED headlights fitting around reshaped front wings. The new front bumper has been given a substantially bigger radiator grille, this chosen for reasons of function first and form second - according to Simon Newton, Aston’s Director of Vehicle Performance, airflow is improved by 29 per cent and there is a full 50 per cent increase in the amount reaching the revised car’s bigger radiators and intercoolers. The upshot is a car that could apparently work as a Formula 1 safety car without any additional cooling upgrades, should it get the nod to carry on with its predecessor’s duties.

Other changes will take some spotting. The Vantage now sits on 22-inch forged alloys as standard, and the body width has been extended by 30mm to cover a wider track. The front side vents have been redesigned, and have gained DB12-style strakes. The giveaway difference at the rear is the arrival of small air vents on each side of the bumpers, and the quad exhaust tailpipes have also grown in diameter. 

Much more radical remodelling has taken place where it was really needed - inside the cabin. The outgoing Vantage’s interior had some nice touches, but struggled with the ergonomic confusion of trying to fit too much switchgear into too little space. And let’s just not mention the thinly disguised hand-me-down Mercedes UI system and its awkward non-touch screen. 

The new Vantage has been given almost the same redesign that turned the DB11 into the DB12, sharing its larger sister’s gently inclined centre console and touch-sensitive infotainment screen. The physical switchgear layout is identical in both cars. The 2025 Vantage has also lost its predecessor’s three-part digital dashboard for a single screen. Aston’s trademark P/R/D/N transmission buttons have gone – replaced by a stubby gear lever – a loss in terms of character if not function. Good news, though – the chance to see the new car up close in a photography studio proved that the metal steering wheel gearshift paddles offer much more resistance than the too-light ones of the DB12 we drove last year.

Beyond the shock-and-awe spec, we’re also promised a significantly improved driving experience, with the need to maintain driveability given the size of the power increase. “The changes we’ve made to the Vantage are greater than the ones we made to the DB11 to create the DB12,” promises Newton. There have been small but significant structural upgrades, and although the overall increase in torsional rigidity is only quoted at seven per cent, Newton says that in key areas including suspension attachment points it is much better than that. Adaptive dampers will remain standard, with these offering a much greater range of force adjustment than in the old car.

As with the DB12, the new Vantage loses a separate selection for its powertrain and chassis settings, now having a single dynamic controller for all functions through five modes: Wet, Sport, Sport Plus, Track and Individual. (The lack of a DB12 equivalent Comfort setting is an indication of the different priorities of both cars.) Changing these will adjust the engine and transmission mapping, damper stiffness and steering weight as well as tweaking the reactions of the torque biasing rear differential. Newton says this will have less edgy responses in the gentler modes, the outgoing car always felt like it was straining at the leash. The smarter vehicle dynamics brain and stability control are now helped by an ultra-quick six-axis accelerometer to help maintain order when the engine’s full firepower gets deployed.

Given how much the DB12 impressed it’s fair to say that expectations are sky-high for the new Vantage. Here’s hoping it can deliver on them.


Author
Discussion

Bencolem

Original Poster:

1,019 posts

240 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Everything you’d expect of Aston Martin to DB12 the Vantage (front end, wider track, interior) but those wheels still look cartoonishly large for me. And don’t think it really needed 30% more horsepower, I’d have rather they kept the power and the price down a bit. But its a definite improvement.

nite_narc

120 posts

187 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
And PH uses the angle featuring the least changes as the main image for the article...banghead

"Not that there are big exterior changes to sell the huge increase in thrust. Aston’s argument is that Vantage buyers already loved the way the car looked, and so the changes are both limited and carefully considered."

Of course they do, try asking the people that didn't buy the Vantage owing to its looks.


wistec1

292 posts

42 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Not so sure about the looks and that rear is a dbx mash up. The vantage appears to have lost some of its beauty. And then no matter how good it may be there is always that Merc elephant in the room. Nah.

foxhounduk

496 posts

181 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
What’s with the cod fish eyes?
The front is gapingly huge and there’s nothing distinctive. It’s just a big old fish mouth with the odd looking headlamps. The stance is almost cartoonish.
Who are they paying for these designs and who signs them off?

The 2013 and beyond face-lift DB9 will always be one of the most elegant and beautiful cars ever made.

David87

6,663 posts

213 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Front end is a bit One-77. Not sure if I like it yet - looks okay in some images and not others. Was rather hoping they’d just make it look like the DB10.

Sway

26,325 posts

195 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
I know I'll be an outlier, but I bloody love it.

Aston has always been criticised - quite rightly - for their own models pissing on each others chips and having way too much overlap.

Well, that's not the case any more. A true sports car, where DB12 is GT.

Then there's the engine. Yes, it's made by Merc - except now it's not a thing of tiny tweaks to something you can buy in a S Class, but monstrously more powerful and very clearly 'Aston's engine'.

No one ever, ever, criticised Pagani for having a Merc engine!

928 GTS

468 posts

96 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Sway said:
I know I'll be an outlier, but I bloody love it.
Much better than previous model. Especially inside as long as its other not so sporty seats. Sadly it is unlikely there will ever be manual option.

m62tu

35 posts

40 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
It is nice, surely an improvement over the clamshell vantage. In my view the second best looking vantage after the Henrik Fisker design of the mid 2000s. But these boutique brands need to drop the russian doll concept. Give the entry level Astons angular styling reminiscent of 80 or 90s vantages. While leaving the db series with fluid lines. The power specs are offensive to Astons top tier clients. Those buying dbs' wont be able to lose the vantage at the lights spending 80% more.

dunebuggy

50 posts

116 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
I think it's (finally) stunning.

Lotusgav

122 posts

160 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
I think it’s ace - I’d have one in a heartbeat. Love the brand, love the. V8, love the interior, that’s brought it right up to date. Cracking job. Unlikely to ever even get to drive one 😢

Puddenchucker

4,108 posts

219 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Can't say I'm enamoured by the looks: The front has the obligatory huge gopping grille and the rear looks fussy and over styled.

Mannginger

9,072 posts

258 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
The previous gen looks more modern still. I really don't like these uber-wide mouths but overall the car does look good. It's out of my price range but I guess does mean the previous gens may become more accessible!

Motormouth88

246 posts

61 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
That is hands down one of the best looking cars I’ve ever seen, I think it looks superb…I know some will disagree but god knows why haha

johnag007

260 posts

242 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Astons always tend to look good from the outside, less so from the inside, and overall very slightly stale age wise, but there is an underlying elegance. I do not know if I am getting older or Aston is finally getting younger, but my word I love the looks both inside and outside!

My list of potential sports cars has just gone from 2 to 3, the McLaren Artura, Maserati MC20 being the other 2. Interestingly this one is slightly cheaper to start off with, well done AM.

Corkys

256 posts

202 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
I think that looks stunning. Loving that. Very muscular proportions.
Interior is so much better, it is one of the things that put off the old one, it was cheap looking.

Milemuncher

514 posts

116 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Interior looks much better but I still don’t love the looks. Headlights look a bit Ford Puma?

TheBinarySheep

1,131 posts

52 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Sway said:
I know I'll be an outlier, but I bloody love it.
Same, I think it looks amazing. It's the sort of thing, where if I were a kid, I'd have that on my wall. In fact, as a grown up, I'd have that on my wall as inspiration of perfection.

NGK210

2,960 posts

146 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
That looks epic. Absolutely cool as fook. Yes, please party

Finally, the Dame Edna headlights that sullied the DB11, and continue to do so on the DB12, have been binned. Halle-frickin'-lujah!

Cabin looks great and, obvs, it has real buttons and knobs, and doesn't have an afterthought / bolt-on 1st-gen iPad. (Ferrari kindly note.)

Arguably, the Vantage's styling is more cohesive than the DB12's - and the Vantage will probably be quicker?

So unless there's a need for two toddler-sized rear seats, why bother with the pricier DB12 - what's its USP?

But the DB12 is a GT. Is it, though? By all accounts the new Maser GranTurismo is a more serene high-speed cruiser, and it's a genuine 4-seater. And it's cheaper.

Oops. Has this magnificent new Vantage made the DB12 redundant?

AndrewD

7,541 posts

285 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
The looks and interior have improved.

But a near £200k sports car (inc options) and it has an auto gearbox?

Sley

17 posts

50 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Front looks too much like a Merc now and interior has Porsche overtones, nothing too unique going on here…