RE: Aston Martin Rapide | PH Auction Block
RE: Aston Martin Rapide | PH Auction Block
Thursday 4th June

Aston Martin Rapide | PH Auction Block

6.0-litres up front and space for four inside - what more do you need?


Now is not a great time for those of us who love a fast four-door. Both the BMW M5 and AMG E-Class are drastically different propositions to what they used to be (and seldom more likeable), the Maserati Quattroporte is gone, the V8 Lexuses have said sayonara and the Audi S8 won’t be replaced. Shame. While the business case is hard to argue with - big petrol engines are almost impossible to make emissions compliant on their own, SUVs sell better - it remains disappointing. 

Because there’s really nothing like the supersaloon experience; a surfeit of performance, sophistication and theatre really does make every journey feel very special indeed. Lower, sleeker four- and five-doors are so much more suave and stylish than those that must ride higher. It’s a fast car niche that’s very easy to be very fond of. 

And the Aston Martin Rapide must be one of the most likeable. Oh sure, it was never the most capacious executive car around, and the DBX that replaced it as the family friendly Aston is one of the very best SUVs out there, but as a slightly more practical spin on the VH architecture it absolutely nailed the brief. Because here was a car just as arresting to look at and beguiling to drive as any DB9 or Vantage, with room for a couple of people (or bikes) in the back. The Gaydon MPV, if you will. 

But perhaps because it was never quite as glamorous as the two-doors, and with the turbo’d German V8s going faster than the V12 for less, the Rapide tends to be forgotten about a little. They’re seldom seen and, while having new Rapides around feels like just a few years ago, it actually went out of production after a 10-year run at the start of this decade. And a lot has happened at Aston since just 2020. 

This Rapide is one of the very first, a 470hp six-speed car on a 60-plate. The Rapide would go on to more powerful, more exciting things - the 550hp S and the 600hp AMR, with the eight-speed - but you probably don’t need us to tell you that all the standard VH Astons are abundantly appealing. They sound spectacular, they look great, and the value proposition looks hard to argue with. 

This one has covered just 34,000 miles in a little under 16 years, and benefits from a fresh set of Michelins. The service history is excellent (including fresh fluids this year, just 40 miles ago), there’s months left on the MOT and, well, doesn’t it look magnificent? Black is notoriously difficult to keep clean, but the Rapide has recently been detailed and ceramic coated, so it’s still pretty smart. The cream hide - as part of the Luxe spec upgrade - is a nice contrast inside, and has lasted well. You’re going to be oversubscribed on lift requests, that seems certain, friends and family desperate to experience four-seat, four-door, 6.0-litre motoring. Keep a healthy kitty for fuel and maintenance (as you would any other supersaloon), and enjoy the ride. Sounds eminently achievable in something this exceptional. If not now, when? 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

asci.white

Original Poster:

519 posts

99 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Always had a soft spot for these after chatting to an owner once who let me have a good look around the car.

loudlashadjuster

6,218 posts

210 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Definitely one of the most elegant four-doors ever produced. A V12 family bus is very appealing, forecourt agony notwithstanding.

Looking at the classifieds this is a £30-35k car. Can barely buy a new Golf for that nowadays (cliché alert!) but even with having to stick a few thousand a year away each year for warrantly/maintenance, it's probably not much more expensive in the medium run*

*as long as you don't count the fuel biggrin

ensignia

944 posts

261 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
I looked at one of these, but they felt quite underwhelming to drive and didn't sound all that good. They're massive as well but not all that spacious given the size.

The interior felt very dated although the materials were nice. I just looked at the prices - christ, they're dirt cheap now!

disco666

589 posts

172 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
One of the best looking four doors ever built in my opinion.
Huge value now- maintenance is expensive but they are pretty reliable.

HazzaT

647 posts

71 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Gorgeous. Weirdly looks less dated than the DB9 despite basically just being a longer version

I don't think I'd even care if it weren't very good to drive, just look at the thing

CSK1

1,806 posts

150 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
ensignia said:
I looked at one of these, but they felt quite underwhelming to drive and didn't sound all that good. They're massive as well but not all that spacious given the size.

The interior felt very dated although the materials were nice. I just looked at the prices - christ, they're dirt cheap now!
When I did the Aston Martin Driving experience in Millbrook about 10 years ago, the instructors told me the Rapide was one of the best handling Astons available.
Maybe the one you looked at wasn't properly set up.
Lovely cars, not very spacious but you have to look at it like a big 2+2, teenagers will fit comfortably in the back and I had a short ride in the back of a Rapide and it felt quite snug but comfortable.
Very underrated cars at unbeatable used prices.

Cobalteer

38 posts

150 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Rarely do I feel I need an Aston Martin in my life but this (as a stand in for a Taraf that I really can’t afford) definitely has a tentacle around my ankle.
Not sure about black but a royal blue or purple one. Mmm.
Quite gorgeous.

ghibbett

1,910 posts

211 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
This is a Magna-built Rapide. That's a good thing.

Did many miles in them back in 2009-2012.

Not really that quick. Sound great. Rear seat-backs fold flat - great for carrying skis & snowboards. Good mile muncher (fuel consumption aside).

It's a lot of V12 car for the money.

StuntmanMike

14,270 posts

177 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Didn’t like these when they first came out, but I think they have aged incredibly well.

No mechanical issues? Apart from the shagged brake disc and four cracked tyres rofl

Fiesta1.0L

109 posts

124 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Given it's built on the same core design as the old Jag V6, can Rocketeer fit this motor in the front of an NA MX5?

Asking for a friend.

ensignia

944 posts

261 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
CSK1 said:
ensignia said:
I looked at one of these, but they felt quite underwhelming to drive and didn't sound all that good. They're massive as well but not all that spacious given the size.

The interior felt very dated although the materials were nice. I just looked at the prices - christ, they're dirt cheap now!
When I did the Aston Martin Driving experience in Millbrook about 10 years ago, the instructors told me the Rapide was one of the best handling Astons available.
Maybe the one you looked at wasn't properly set up.
Lovely cars, not very spacious but you have to look at it like a big 2+2, teenagers will fit comfortably in the back and I had a short ride in the back of a Rapide and it felt quite snug but comfortable.
Very underrated cars at unbeatable used prices.
To be fair, I only had a 15 minute test drive through town and dual carriageways so couldn't really put it through its paces, very different to a, presumably newish one, at an AM driving experience..

It felt pretty stodgy and underpowered to me, and the engine note was a bit too muted so I didn't pursue it. It was totally different to the car I eventually bought which was another 4 seater V12.

Orangutangerine

823 posts

206 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
One of these is definitely on the lottery win list!

nismo48

6,600 posts

233 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Orangutangerine said:
One of these is definitely on the lottery win list!
+1

Lefty

20,417 posts

228 months

Wednesday 3rd June
quotequote all
Oh now that really is lovely.

Yes please

smilo996

3,674 posts

196 months

Thursday 4th June
quotequote all
Beautiful and before the gopping radiator. Interior is a bit dated but in the flesh, diffcult to tell it has Four doors (chome aside on this) and although snug, got to be better than a coupe.

Cheap thrills for under 40k and plenty of miles to put on it.

Did Kevin the teenager clean the engine bay?

Chubbyross

4,932 posts

111 months

Thursday 4th June
quotequote all
Wow! I haven't looked at one of these for a couple of years and don't they just get better and better looking as the years roll by. With all the jelly mold SUVs around these days this stands out by a country mile. So elegant. I would have one in a heartbeat if I could bear to part with the servicing and standard maintenance costs.

Geoffcapes

1,207 posts

190 months

Thursday 4th June
quotequote all
If you have kids, make sure they're out of car seats as the space in the back is, well, compromised....

But as a car, a great cruiser. They sound ok, (must be the later ones that sound great) but just ride that wave of V12 torque...

Every journey feels serene in one.

Caterhamfan

362 posts

196 months

Thursday 4th June
quotequote all
StuntmanMike said:
Didn t like these when they first came out, but I think they have aged incredibly well.

No mechanical issues? Apart from the shagged brake disc and four cracked tyres rofl
The MoT sheet listing advisories for "slightly damaged/cracking or perished" tyres and "brake disc worn, pitted or scored, but not seriously weakened" appears to be from October 2025.
The advert says four brand new tyres but, confusingly, there is an invoice for two new rear tyres in 2023 so they didn't last long!
Mind you, the ad also says 'No evidence of any scratches, dents or dings" but the nearside front corner looks pretty scuffed in the close up, as do a number of other areas including the door handles. confused