RE: New 1,000hp V12 Brabus Bodo is remarkable...
RE: New 1,000hp V12 Brabus Bodo is remarkable...
Yesterday

New 1,000hp V12 Brabus Bodo is remarkable...

But when it costs one million euros, can it really be better than the Aston Vanquish underneath?


Brabus has been building up to something like the Bodo for a long while. According to CEO Constantin Buschmann, son of Brabus’s original founder, the idea of a supercar has been percolating for nearly two decades, and can be traced back to his father’s vision of a ‘next-level Gran Turismo’. In the meantime, the firm has repeatedly proven its willingness to think outside the Mercedes box and apply its name to all manner of coachbuilding projects. Now, partly as an homage to Bodo Buschmann, it has made the final leap and produced a 1,000hp 2+2 ‘Masterpiece’ said to be capable of 223mph. It retails at one million euros. 

The price is not just indicative of the limited supply - there will be just 77 examples produced - nor the level of performance emanating from the turbocharged 5.2-litre V12, but also the fact that the Bodo is built upon the bones of the Aston Martin Vanquish. Which is a bit like basing your movie on The Godfather. Though Brabus doesn’t make mention of its underlying donor, its identity is surely an integral part of its ‘one-second-wow’ strategy - what better way to justify the seven-figure cost than by quietly explaining that one of the world’s finest GT cars (arguably the finest) is underwriting all the cheques being cashed by the custom-made body? 

Of course, if you’re inclined to think that body not nearly as handsome as the one Marek Reichman came up with, you’re not alone - although no one would deny that the four-foot-tall Bodo is a striking piece of design, one apparently devoted to the kind of aerodynamic efficiency you need when targeting 360km/h (for the record, the Vanquish’s claimed top speed is 214mph). The wholesale difference between the two also reflects Brabus’s mastery of modern-day coach building - not just for the skill required to produce the body entirely from carbon fibre, nor to shape it for the kind of load incurred beyond three-figures, but also to ensure that sufficient air is being fed to the monstrous V12. 

Little wonder then that Brabus points to the two Ram-air ducts integrated into the new 13-slat radiator grille. These help to feed a two ‘specially developed’ turbochargers, which, alongside a new airbox and ‘highly efficient’ charge-air cooling - not to mention an elaborate, vertically-stacked stainless steel exhaust system - are responsible for nudging the 5.2-litre unit well beyond the 835hp it produces in the Vanquish. Aston is itself widely believed to be cooking up an ’S’ branded version of its flagship, though it will be interesting to see whether it is minded to replicate the 885lb ft of torque that Brabus claims to have found between 2,900 and 5,000rpm. 

The tuner makes no mention of modifying the eight-speed automatic nor the sophisticated e-diff, so we’ll assume they remain much as Aston left them, though it suggests it has partnered with KW to develop an ‘electronically controlled [suspension] featuring aluminum coilover struts, specifically tuned to the coupe’s 21-inch wheel and tyre combination’, the latter a variant of the new Continental SportContact 7s produced specifically for the Bodo. The 20-spoke forged alloys are said to reduce unsprung mass (though the quoted 1,774kg dry kerbweight is identical to the Vanquish’s) and, as you might expect, the carbon-ceramic composite brakes remain standard fit. 

This is the kind of peace of mind you want when slowing a 5m-long, 2m-wide car capable of hitting 124mph in 8.5 seconds. Moreover, Brabus reckons the additional power buys the Bodo a 0.3-second advantage when it comes hitting 62mph, and the car must be reined in electronically at its targeted top speed. For additional help, the car can rely on its electrically deployable rear spoiler, which not only continuously adapts its position to enhance rear-axle stability, but also functions as an air brake if you’ve thrown out an anchor above 87mph. Which is comforting when you consider the dramatic taper of the Bodo’s back-end, where the arrangement of LEDs, diffuser, rectangular tailpipes, and exposed carbon boot lid could be said to have trumped the Vanquish’s more abrupt Kamm tail. 

Inside, the architecture is a little more obviously carried over, though you’d hardly accuse Brabus of failing to go to town. Much like the exterior, black is an overriding theme (though rest assured, other colours are available), as is the extensive use of composite. Elsewhere, in inimitable fashion, the tune has employed black leather of ‘various finishes’ to virtually every available surface. There’s much additional embroidery atop this base level, not to mention wall-to-wall quilting, though the eagle-eyed among you will notice that no little time and effort has been expended on altering the appearance of the Bodo’s air vents, if not their physical location. The centre console, with its many clickable buttons, appears to be unaltered. 

That this is the primary means of identifying the Vanquish says much about the car’s transformation, and the unprecedented amount of work it has required. “Nearly fifty years ago, my father decided to start his own business. His passion is what built Brabus,” noted Buschmann. "However, there was one car he would often talk about, which, in the end, he never got to realize. It was a dream he had for a very long time. Today, we are honoring his legacy by finally bringing this dream to life.” In this regard, whether or not that vision exceeds the one concocted by Aston Martin is probably beside the point: the Brabus Bodo lives. For its maker, and 77 lucky customers, that is surely enough.


Author
Discussion

Benzinaio

Original Poster:

474 posts

27 months

Yesterday (03:33)
quotequote all
I like the subtle little grill.

Puddenchucker

5,534 posts

243 months

Yesterday (05:06)
quotequote all
Batman's weekend car.

GTEYE

2,417 posts

235 months

Yesterday (05:49)
quotequote all
Dramatic? Yes

Pretty? Hell, no.

It reminds me of that crazy Maybach Exelero, which would also have suited Batman.

Zenzz

126 posts

130 months

Yesterday (06:57)
quotequote all
Very odd

carinaman

24,638 posts

197 months

Yesterday (07:03)
quotequote all
I am seeing Lamborghini Estoque/Audi A7 like styling in the rear light strip.

Concept car rear and rear third quarter view, in your face aspirational soccerist rap video bling frontal styling.

A £1 Million automotive bauble with frontal styling easily beaten by a Ford Mustang available at your local Ford dealership and available used.


Are the headlamps off the shelf Mustang parts?

Edited by carinaman on Monday 18th May 07:08

Andy86GT

935 posts

90 months

Yesterday (07:09)
quotequote all
I think I'd cry if I watched them taking an angle grinder to one of these, cry


Augustus Windsock

3,741 posts

180 months

Yesterday (07:09)
quotequote all
Er, no.

seefarr

1,773 posts

211 months

Yesterday (07:35)
quotequote all
Designer: What do you think of the design?
Photographer: Well, it's a black car with black badges and black wheels and we'll still be photographing it in the dark.
Designer: oh.

rodericb

8,646 posts

151 months

Yesterday (07:40)
quotequote all
whoa. that's mega.

How much of it is based on the AM Vantage? Do they get one from autotrader and glue body panels to it or do they get some bare chassis direct from Aston Martin and build the car from scratch?

thebraketester

15,601 posts

163 months

Yesterday (07:41)
quotequote all
Benzinaio said:
I like the subtle little grill.
It's a bit Jaecoo isn't it... gross

Gary29

5,042 posts

124 months

Yesterday (07:56)
quotequote all
If I won the lotto I wouldn't tell anybody, but there would definitely be signs!

swisstoni

22,853 posts

304 months

Yesterday (08:18)
quotequote all
Sort of the billionaire's version of the people who build a replica Ferrari out of a Toyota.
But this is even more nuts because you started with an Aston Martin Vanquish.

nismo48

6,513 posts

232 months

Yesterday (08:21)
quotequote all
Well its certainly different, not sure if that's in a good way

T1berious

2,640 posts

180 months

Yesterday (08:23)
quotequote all
seefarr said:
Designer: What do you think of the design?
Photographer: Well, it's a black car with black badges and black wheels and we'll still be photographing it in the dark.
Designer: oh.
^This^

I can't understand why you'd want to do the promo car based on the Batman Tumbler colour scheme.. I guess it's not satin or matt?

At the price and numbers it won't be hurtling through the night at a derestricted autobahn any where near you any time soon. They'd just use something else like an Aston Martin.... Oh wait......

Bluehorseshoe

6 posts

Yesterday (08:28)
quotequote all
There are probably enough customers in Germany UAE and the US to sell everyone of these i suspect they have orders for all of them already.

It's nice just well it's an Aston with new cloths which I guess is point of coach building

Turbobanana

8,077 posts

226 months

Yesterday (08:28)
quotequote all
I think the profile looks stunning, but black on black with black and shot at dusk makes it quite hard to tell. The details let it down, as someone else has pointed out.

Was it photographed by touch? Some colour (inside and outside) wouldn't go amiss.

richinlondon

849 posts

147 months

Yesterday (08:39)
quotequote all
quite the statement, Mustangesque lights at front and rear reminds me of an Audi A7

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,626 posts

123 months

Yesterday (08:54)
quotequote all
Change for changes sake is never a good thing.....

SydneyBridge

11,179 posts

183 months

Yesterday (09:05)
quotequote all
I suppose it means that Aston sell an extra 77 cars which is good for them

LRDefender

548 posts

33 months

Yesterday (09:08)
quotequote all
Well it's no Austin Allegro but do I like it?

Hell yeah and I would love to have the choice between this, the Jaguar Type 01 and the new Alpina. All three are automotive artwork and thank goodness car company's are making these wonderful machines.

driving What a time to be alive driving