Prior Convictions: Forgetting your roots
Is Aston's return to its former home more than just a nostalgic indulgence?
Some 25 of these new track-only GTs, built to the same specification as the originals, are to be made, in the same location as the originals, and priced at around £1.5m each. Only 75 DB4 GTs were built between 1959 and 1963, and only eight were lightweight models. They won quite a lot of races, and are the specification to which these new cars will be built.
The Newport Pagnell factory was eventually vacated by Aston's production line in 2007, after the business had already relocated to Gaydon, Warwickshire. Today Newport Pagnell still houses Aston Martin Works, the facility that looks after classic Astons.
Good news, then, for fans of classic Astons who can't spare the £3m-plus a period DB4 GT demands. (Well, good news for 25 of them, anyway.) And good news, too, for those who like to see production, such as it is, returning to Newport Pagnell.
Does it matter, this return of manufacturing to an old stomping ground? It's being billed as something historic but I suspect it doesn't really. I guess it's important in which country Astons Martins are made, for the reason BMW makes Rolls-Royces and Minis here. But I doubt it makes the blindest bit of difference which town. Rolls-Royces were never historically assembled at Goodwood and yet they now make more cars than ever. Some Minis are made in Austria but, because the factory in Oxford churns out more than 200,000 a year, I don't imagine most people really notice.
It's only when writing that sentence that I remembered the Aston Rapide was built in Austria for a time, too. And yet still, via Gaydon and Austria, the company turned out more cars than it ever did at Newport Pagnell or, just as importantly, the places it built cars in the 34 years before it moved there. From a historical significance point of view, it might as well return to Feltham.
Anyway, what of the car itself, this DB4 GT Recreation? Curious thing. I'm sure it'll be terrific, and if you've bought one, I dare say you'll love it to bits. That's all that really matters, isn't it? Because whether it says good or bad things about a company rather depends on your point of view.
Do you see it as an important piece of work in reminding people of Aston's race heritage, for example? A way of showcasing the precious, otherwise vanishing skills of the craftspeople who still work over there? Or do you think it's a relatively easy way to pull £37.5m through the door? I suppose it could be both.
Jaguar also does this Recreation thing, but hardly anyone else does, so I wonder if it's a peculiarly British trait. We do like trading on nostalgia, after all. I can't imagine Ferrari turning out a few more 250 SWBs, for example, or Porsche making a 917 Recreation series. They have the vibe of companies who are more interested in creating new legends than reprising old ones. I mean, they'd probably ask you that, given today's cars are so good, why the hell you'd want yesterday's?
You wouldn't, for example, approach Sony and ask for a moderately-sized television, with a convex screen, mediocre picture quality, only one speaker, and a 150kg box the size of a chicken coop attached to the back of it. Ideally clad it in wood and put it on wheels and make sure I can't adjust it unless I get off the sofa while you're at it, there's a good bunch. I mean, how stupid does that sound? I don't know. Maybe only about as stupid as the fact that I still sometimes use a 48k ZX Spectrum simulator on a new £1,000 laptop. It's complicated, is I suppose what I'm saying.
I suspect, ultimately, then, that in all the talk of history and heritage and craftsmanship and so on, there are only two things that really matter: that the skills stay alive, and that they're worth a not insignificant £37.5m.
There is a third thing, which is that there is quite obviously a market for them, and some people somewhere are prepared to part with their hard earned cash to actually have one.
You also forgot the MGRV8 which was effectively a similar thing - and I am sure there must be others that will come to mind after I have had my 2nd coffee :-)
Anyone who has done a serious restoration of something realises that there is a point where building it new is a viable option than the patchwork of repair panels.
When they are digging them out of feilds it is a bad omen in any car scene.
Aftermarket manufacturers of repair panels or complete shells for cars always has the shadow of knowing that if the original manufacturer starts supplying it then it becomes not just about who has the better quality restoration/replica, but who is the type of owner.
I think they are getting the Lads at Aston to pop a brown jacket on to give it that Goodwood Revival romance as most Aston Martins/morgan/Mclaren/Lotus/TVR have servicing done at the factory and this romantic connection far outweighs the quality of this, even from new anyone who has owned a British sports car from new is aware how bad things are for these new cars and that they just wrap themselves in the Union Jack over bits falling off or not working due to barometric variances.
The question of car manufacturers just building the iconic cars so they can lend them out to car hacks on the Miller Miglia or Classic Lemans to maintain this brand image is more a question of where these car companies see their heritage.
You need to make non roadworthy variants, as 'track only' gets them out of being sued. So odd ball race homologation versions are what they like. I would think that Porsche would be thinking of something like the 550 or a 911ST, '74 rsr IROC race cars as they are shoving £5 notes in the mouth of the MILF that is early 911 history.
Ferrari would probably do this, but only after you show you bought every naff model since 1985.
Lamborghini have just started the polo storico and are looking to show car hacks why they like hexagonal vents.
I don't think Japanese or Swedish car manufacturers would make a carbon copy of their 60's classic as they are a forward thinking culture.
Why does it matter which country the car is made in, other than that it is made in the best possible way? Seems like patriotic/nostalgic guff to me.
Whilst the provenance of these recreations will always be questionable, I think it's great there's a market for them and hope many will be driven properly!
Is the author suggesting that the decision to build the car at Newport Pagnell was driven by some kind of nostalgia-fuelled cynicism?
I imagine it’s a purely practical decision, as I’m not sure where else AML would build such a car? Gaydon is currently at full capacity building the last of the Vantages, Vanquishes and Rapides on the ‘heritage line’ (the other production line being purely for DB11), which will then be re-tooled for new Vantage in Q1. St Athan isn’t yet ready, and the only time other facility they own is Newport Pagnell.
That this place is full of people (and equipment) that have been restoring DB cars since 2007, and that many of these men and women were also building AMV8s, Virages, DB7s and Vanquishes pre-‘07, makes it a bit of a no-brainer doesn’t it?
Always a joy on an early morning run to Silverstone to have an Aston blast past on one of the lanes around Newport Pagnell.
It's mostly retro video gamers (pre-HDMI) who competitively speed run video games (we do have bi-annual charity events that raise > $1M USD each for charity), *and* the games they speed run tend to require "frame perfect" tricks. The reason being is that older consoles were designed to be based around VBLANK intervals (~60Hz for NTSC, ~50Hz for PAL), whereas newer TVs using LCD technology have a bit of latency (quickest are around 9ms, or a bit more than half an NTSC frame, whereas many sets are 60ms, or nearly 4 NTSC frames) between what the console pushes to its output and before it is displayed on the set. For people with cheap LCD televisions, that near 4-frame delay is the difference between nailing the trick, or hitting the reset switch on the console and starting over, because what's on the screen is actually 60ms in the past (on the console).
However, retro video games have gone the same route as classic cars -- hobbyist upstarts making equipment to drag the old stuff into the modern era. For example, hardware upscalers, new boards that can be installed and take the image directly off the PPU (with no digital-to-analog conversion) and output it over HDMI. For those who remain analog, consoles that used RF adapters or RCA composite video can be modified to output an RGB signal (with composite sync) over a Euro-SCART cable for the cleanest possible analog image to be passed to a set or to a hardware upscaler (to 720p or 1080p over HDMI). What with high-end LCD-based televisions getting better at reducing input latency though, CRTs remain a niche, with the diehards mostly just buying old PVMs/BVMs and not looking to buy a new CRT.
But there are others who hate this dilution, the DVLA modified car
reform was pushed by Bugatti owners club members not happy at the PurSang T35s being seen as 1930s cars.
As cars are a reflection of your personality it is natural that people enjoy selfishness too.
I would see that there will be those who resent these DB4 GTs and will make a point of excluding these if they can. You can see this in Goodwood and other vintage racing or car events. You won't be invited or have to wait in the que behind the older original cars even if those cars have questionable history to start with
It's mostly retro video gamers (pre-HDMI) who competitively speed run video games (we do have bi-annual charity events that raise > $1M USD each for charity), *and* the games they speed run tend to require "frame perfect" tricks. The reason being is that older consoles were designed to be based around VBLANK intervals (~60Hz for NTSC, ~50Hz for PAL), whereas newer TVs using LCD technology have a bit of latency (quickest are around 9ms, or a bit more than half an NTSC frame, whereas many sets are 60ms, or nearly 4 NTSC frames) between what the console pushes to its output and before it is displayed on the set. For people with cheap LCD televisions, that near 4-frame delay is the difference between nailing the trick, or hitting the reset switch on the console and starting over, because what's on the screen is actually 60ms in the past (on the console).
However, retro video games have gone the same route as classic cars -- hobbyist upstarts making equipment to drag the old stuff into the modern era. For example, hardware upscalers, new boards that can be installed and take the image directly off the PPU (with no digital-to-analog conversion) and output it over HDMI. For those who remain analog, consoles that used RF adapters or RCA composite video can be modified to output an RGB signal (with composite sync) over a Euro-SCART cable for the cleanest possible analog image to be passed to a set or to a hardware upscaler (to 720p or 1080p over HDMI). What with high-end LCD-based televisions getting better at reducing input latency though, CRTs remain a niche, with the diehards mostly just buying old PVMs/BVMs and not looking to buy a new CRT.
Tell me which Older Aston is not a parts bin special?
Gassing Station | General Gassing | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff