What did you do within your 1st 6months of ownership
What did you do within your 1st 6months of ownership
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davidismynaim

Original Poster:

9 posts

7 months

Tuesday
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I thought it would be interesting to learn what work new Aston owners did within their first 6months of ownership. This covers things you knew about, things you didn't know about but realised needed doing (and the sells didn't sort you out) and vanity work due to the shear pride of new ownership.

So here goes with my 6 months. I bought my first Aston about 6 months ago, a lovely 2015 Vantage S manual in Quantum silver and waterfall AMi II ICE.

First step was to have it ceramic coated, from the place I bought it from.

Next was a trip to Aston Installations, where my amazing partner so kindly bought me the upgrade to AMi III which basically adds the factory carplay to the 2015 car. I have to say, while expensive it was a great upgrade, as I would have really struggled with the satnav in the stock car.

While there, we decided the 10 year old battery was overdue a replacement , so that too was swapped out. I didn't go for a light weight lithium unit, on reflection I think I should have, as the weight saving is one of the easiest ways to shave off a few kg. But I wont be tracking it, so maybe not such a poor choice,

We also had the pollen and air filters replaced where it was there too. It amazes me how a 10 year old car that have only ever had Works services never had these units replaced. To be fair they were not terrible but I do think after 30k miles and 10 years you would have thought they would have got done?

I have since done 3 vanity DIY things to the car

1. I have bought a carbon fibre version of the Aston martin umbrella and made up my own leather loops for it, very pleased with how OEM and fully reversable this is, I will post separately on this to show what I did
2. I pimped the cheap 2nd valet key to make it much nicer, adding weight to it and a custom paint job. If anyone is interested, I will share a post on this too.
3. by far the biggest of these 3, I had a custom made metal gear knob as I felt the leather unit felt and looked a little ordinary, and I like the feel and look of a metal changer. I will do a post on this too, to show what I did.

I replaced the 4 Bridgestone, 2 on the rear were original! The 2 fronts were about 5 years old with a nice set of Conti Sport Contact 7. I have barely run these in, but the initial impression is great, they give a much more compliant ride and I have no doubt they will be much more reassuring through the bends. The old Bridgestone's are harsh and gave little confidence. Big mistake to not replace the TPMS units when I did this, as now 1 unit is presenting a fault on the dash, so this will be my next project.

Finally I have just received from ECPS carbon fibre mirror caps and rear light infills, both very cosmetic items, but to my mind complimentary to the S carbon fibre diffuser and splitter. Now I suspect I will fall further down that rabbit hole with some interior carbon fibre bits. I would love to hear what others think works best in this car. My haptic dash is piano black - so thinking about the options of full waterfall and air vents, and/or the door sills and internal door pull/catch?

Reynardff1600

32 posts

36 months

Tuesday
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I drove the car as much as I could. But I replaced the serpentine belt, all 4 O2 sensors and of course an oil change. I also got the most current navigation disc for a 2007 Vantage which I I believe is 2015.

Nigel_O

3,645 posts

243 months

Wednesday
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Tyres - £715
Remote switch for fuse 22 - £68
Satnav gears repair kit - £24
Jacking pads - £76
Rear light seals - £13
Bonnet gas struts & rear hatch repair plates - £150
Car cover - £359
Floor mats, pollen filters, boot carpet, touch-up paint - £587
HVAC hoses - £65
Aluminium radio knobs - £27
Service - £1,165
Aircon condenser - £516

£3,765 in the first six months.

It didn't get any cheaper in the next six months, or at all, really....

Aldhun

217 posts

107 months

Wednesday
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Doors and rear PPF'd - for some reaon these had not been done; Front camera fitted; New floor mats to protect the OEM ones; CCC's Auto remote memory exhaust remote control to give the Vanquish S more sound/theatre; a front number plate - it didn't have one; an Indoor car cover (OEM); and, Jack pads

dhallworth

127 posts

215 months

Wednesday
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I've had my V8 Vantage for a month now.

So far I've done the following:

Bought a leather ECU pouch for the key
Replaced the vacuum pump for the exhaust valves
Replaced a rear light unit due to condensation
Fitted the AMUpgrades headlight venting kit
Put a set of jacking pads in the boot
Fixed a leak on the air con system and now just need to get it recharged.

Bit disappointed as my main reason for purchasing it from a main dealer (Specialist car dealer, not Aston unfortunately) was to avoid having to do these things myself. However, apparently I only have a major mechanical warranty on it.

Then on 22nd April it's going in to our local detailer for a 3 day paint correction and ceramic coating.

Edited by dhallworth on Wednesday 8th April 20:08


Edited by dhallworth on Wednesday 8th April 20:40

davidismynaim

Original Poster:

9 posts

7 months

Wednesday
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@dhallworth would love to see some before and after pics. My Vantage has 10 year old PPF and on the bonnet there are strange, what I can only describe as creases. I am guessing it is just down to the age of the PPF. So I've been considering getting it removed and a new one applied, as I will want to get PPF on the new carbon fibre wingmirror caps too.

I watched an amazing youtube video on an Aston Vanquish being detailed, I was blown away as to the attention to detail. Here it is, if you are interested: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qndrq_0KA10&t=...

Davil

646 posts

50 months

Thursday
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In the first six months of my V8V AMR

- Full XPel PPF with ceramic coating. Ceramic coating on wheels.
- Bridgestone Potenza Sport tyres. A revelation in ride, handling and steering feel compared to the 20 year old tyre tech of the RE71s which were wheelspinning pieces of rock.
- Secondary cat delete. A bit more power, a lot more sound a little less weight.
- Porterfield R4-S brake pads. No more squealing. Much less brake dust.
- Deadweight industries Lithium Iron Phosphate battery. About 20kg saved, no worries about flat batteries anymore.
- CCC Exhaust switch thing. I actually never use it.
- Passenger eject button in ashtray/cubby to replace plastic 12v cover. Childish but useful for ill behaving passenger.
- Leather AMR key pouch in black and volcano red to match the interior. The standard one was boring black.

The most recent update 3 years in is an AMR twin plate clutch and GT4 lightweight flywheel.
Absolutely no chatter, incredibly light clutch pedal, way better shifting. Best shifter I ve ever used now. More urgent and nicer throttle response at slow speeds and off the line. Reverse is no longer stress inducing. Feels like a different car.

Such a wonderful, wonderful car. Enjoy yours!


Edited by Davil on Thursday 9th April 05:29

andratch

46 posts

6 months

Thursday
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Tires, all fluids, paint correction, leather conditioning, H&R springs, proper spacers, alignment, xpipe, exhaust valve fuse, brake service, refinish the front valence (scrapes), install scrape-armor. Next up is spark plugs/coils.

jafbash786

170 posts

111 months

Thursday
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Full cost break down with 30k budget purchased 3 months ago as a small project

Full thread

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...


Wheels refurb 350

Tyres 465 sc7x4

Centre caps 87

Spacers 180 minus 100

Shocks 2407

Am upgrade bits 480

12volt 155

Led Bulbs 55

Consumables 50

Mirror glass 40

1 new plate 19

Plate mounting stuff 42

Wash pump 61

Steering wheel and exaust tips 430

Minus 290 from sale of old bits

Door struts 62

Mirror 30

Touch up paints 30

Service bits 50

Upcoming alignment 80

Door seal 140

2 spare frunt strut mounts 60

Machining 50

4903

18k for car

23k aston thats somewhat sorted that leaves 7k in the kitty.....as i started with a budget of 30k

I since spent a 2150 on the cats intake, and software

Leaves 5k for the future mods and fixez

But as it stands looks all is okay and looks sublime


clarkmagpie

3,668 posts

219 months

Thursday
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Spent the first 4 months chasing oil leaks, air leaks, fuel leaks and EMLS!

Slowly getting there. then another step back.

2004 DB9

Will be heading to specialist next.

Looks very lovely though!!