RE: Aston Martin Vantage | PH Favourite Cars 2024
RE: Aston Martin Vantage | PH Favourite Cars 2024
Monday 30th December 2024

Aston Martin Vantage | PH Favourite Cars 2024

Worried the nanny state is getting in the way of a good time? Not with the new Vantage it isn't...


Truth be told, I was a bit disappointed when Aston Martin unveiled the DB12 last year. For the first substantively new car introduced under the watchful eye and helpfully deep pockets of Canadian billionaire Lawrence Stroll to be a facelifted DB11 seemed a bit underwhelming. As it’d turn out though, the DB12 was a monumental leap over the old car, fixing the bits that didn’t work (mainly the cabin interior) while incrementally improving everything else. So when the covers came off the new Vantage earlier this year, all the signs pointed towards another great Aston.

Certainly, it’s a darn sight prettier than the old one. Admittedly, I never took issue with the 2018 car’s styling and found it far better resolved than the frumpy DB11, but I understand why people found the grille to be a touch fishy. The 2020 facelift improved things with a more conventional mouth, although what Aston’s come up with for the latest version is far more cohesive. It still features much the same silhouette as the old car and details like the duck tail brake lights and diffuser remain largely unchanged. But the larger headlights, reprofiled wing vents and a quartet of exhausts that are finally in proportion with the rest of the back end all contribute to a look that’s as imposing as it is elegant. If the new Vanquish has arguably toppled it as the best-looking model in the current lineup, the Vantage runs it a close second.

Thankfully, Aston been far more ruthless with the interior. There simply wasn’t anything worth saving from the 2018 car’s cabin, because it was a morass of pointless buttons, infuriating tech and a downright ugly design that just wasn't up to scratch. Now, as you may have heard, there’s a much sleeker centre console with just the right amount of switchgear (which still requires a physical press to activate), beautiful rotary dials and a touch screen that won’t make you want to tear the thing off in a fit of rage (even if you do need to squint a bit). Above all, though, every inch of leather, trim piece and switch gear is now of a very high standard; i.e. the sort of quality expected from a marque like Aston Martin. 

As good as that all sounds, I haven’t landed on the Vantage as my favourite car of the year because of a simple nip and tuck. Not exclusively, anyway. See, supercars these days are so approachable that they lull you into a false sense of driver skill. Get intentionally heavy-handed with the right pedal and an electronic aid will help you style it out as a controlled skid, leaving you none the wiser about how close you came to wrapping your new toy around a tree. Of course, the Vantage has all of these things, but it’s the first car I’ve driven in a long time where it seems the systems intervene only when they think you’ve properly overcooked it.

That’s just as easily said as it is done, especially with all the changes that have been made to the AMG-sourced V8. The company has given the twin-turbo, 4.0-litre ‘hot vee’ engine a thorough going over, modifying the cams, enlarging the turbos, improving the cooling and tweaking the compression ratio in the process. The result is a staggering 665hp, or to put it another way, 30 per cent more power than the old Vantage. Aston says it’s the biggest jump in power between generations in its history, and it likes to remind you of that by ushering in 590lb ft of torque from as low as 2,000rpm and lighting the rear axle up.

A flick of the right paddle for second, third, forth and still the rear squirms around, only finding its feet in a sodden Wales when you call for fifth. And that’s in the default Sport mode. Twist the deliciously weighted dial below the centre screen for Sport+ and Track, and you'll discover the latter is where you get access to nine different traction control modes to give you just the right amount of slip angle. It’ll wriggle about even in the more forgiving settings, but once you get on top of the torque delivery and understand when the rear’s likely to break away, you start to uncover the Vantage’s new persona. 

Whereas the old car was very much a GT with a playful edge, the new model feels more focused and agile. The steering, while not as hyper-responsive as a Ferrari Roma’s, reacts more eagerly and feels weightier than before. Drop a couple of gears on the approach to a corner, tuck the nose in and the Vantage rotates beautifully around its centre point, with a small kick from the rear as you power out. Whacking the suspension into its firmest setting doesn’t annihilate the ride quality, partly because the Vantage is on the stiff side anyway, and irons out the slightest hint of body roll when the dampers are set to soft. You need to wrestle it a bit to really get the most from the chassis, which is all the more rewarding when you know that it’s (mostly) you, and not a nannying computer, that’s scything from corner to corner. Or at least it feels that way. Which is entirely the point. 

Naturally, the Vantage isn’t completely without fault. For instance, while it's a substantial improvement over its predecessor, the new infotainment system can still be slow to respond to inputs. This goes for some of the other electrical architecture, too: a simple twist of the dial should be all that’s needed to change the driver modes, but if you were to turn it twice to skip from Sport to Track, the system only registers one input and you have to wait for Sport+ to engage before twisting again. Ugh. Our test car also failed to recognise the key fob a few times. And on one occasion, I went to open the fuel filler cap, only for it to click inwards and not pop back out as it should. Turns out this was an issue on the old model that, annoyingly, hasn’t been rectified for the new one.

Of course, that’s the great thing about PH Favourite Car of the Year: we’re not looking for the outright best of the best from 2024 (though the Vantage is certainly among them), it’s all about the cars that have dug their way under your skin and pitched a tent there. That’s why I’ve chosen the Vantage, because a short blast down a twisty road, V8 snarling (and my goodness, does it sound good here) and rear wheels spinning, reminds you of a time when near-700hp supercars required your full attention to keep pointing in the right direction. True, it’s a fair bit more expensive at £165,000, which does comfortably get you a lightly-used DBS or even a V12 Vantage, but the company has made such strides in the last couple of years that its old brutes now seem outdated by comparison. For years now Aston has been angling to be thought of as the British Ferrari - alongside the new Vanquish, the latest Vantage makes that aspiration seem increasingly reasonable. 


SPECIFICATION | ASTON MARTIN VANTAGE

Engine: 3,982cc V8, twin-turbocharged
Transmission: eight-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive with e-diff
Power (hp): 665@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 590@2,000rpm-5,000rpm
0-62mph: 3.5 seconds
Top speed: 202mph
Weight: 1,605kg (minimum dry mass)
MPG: 23.3
CO2: 274g/km
Price: £165,000

Honourable mention | Toyota GR Yaris

Bit obvious this, isn’t it? I’ve been lucky enough to spend quite a lot of time with the new Toyota GR Yaris over the last 12 months, including a drive on an ice lake near the firm’s WRC team headquarters in Finland and a blast down an old Monte Carlo stage in southern France, almost every minute of which was spent channelling my inner rally driver. The car builds on what made the original so moreish, while fixing the lofty driving position and cluttered dash. All are noticeable improvements over the old model, as is the firmer suspension, which now has the sort of granular texture the original sorely lacked. Having said that, while it feels more planted than ever, I did prefer the slightly softer setup on the old car as it breathed with the undulations of the road rather than religiously following them as any other hot hatch would. And I preferred the old £30,000 (or £33k for the Circuit Pack) price tag, too, because the new model is a whopping £44,250. That doesn’t mean it isn’t brilliant, because it most certainly is, it’s just missing that ‘OMG I must have this now’ factor that made the original a bestseller.  

Author
Discussion

GreatScott2016

Original Poster:

1,951 posts

105 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Very expensive but oh so very nice smile

Benzinaio

367 posts

19 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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An absolute thing of beauty.

Familymad

1,381 posts

234 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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£35k down and £1699 a month peeps

Twinair

910 posts

159 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Two great choices - glad to own one of them in ‘OG’ form. HNY all…!

Familymad

1,381 posts

234 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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I would a new Vanquish obviously and the DB12 is a stunner in the flesh, but this is actually an achievable car in the next 3 years with a bit of Aston depreciation. The 12’s are down to just above £170k. Most were £220-250k upwards new. So if we pin our hopes on a similar loss on a new Vantage in % terms, they should be £130k by end of 2025. That or a Turbo S?

bigyoungdave

279 posts

44 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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What a great two car garage that would be!

Familymad

1,381 posts

234 months

Monday 30th December 2024
quotequote all
Driveway 911 and garage queen Vantage. Just wouldn’t feel right leaving an Aston on the drive…. like leaving your dog out in the garden and not the house?!?

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202412237... first one on A/T. Looks to be a Works collection in the shots. Are they offloading some already like the Emira pre reg Lotus sell off?

Edited by Familymad on Monday 30th December 08:56

Firebobby

849 posts

56 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Utterly brilliant! Motabilty ok with you? That's one in the eye for starmer and his fake green cronies. Well done Aston Martin.

wistec1

650 posts

58 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Two great car choices with the Aston line up having far more competition than the GR has. I sold my DBS earlier this year in a somewhat underwhelmed ownership state of mind and bought a gen 1 GR Yaris which is the better drive imo. Reading the many reviews I'm yet to be convinced that the gen 2 GR will improve things enough to warrant change. My winter daily is a twin air 73 K Panda 4x4 crapper which oddly still brings a smile when I drive it.

cerb4.5lee

38,426 posts

197 months

Monday 30th December 2024
quotequote all
I love how powerful and torquey this Vantage is, and I'd love a go in one. I'm a big fan of the Merc 4.0 V8 twin turbo engine as it is as well, such a punchy engine I reckon.

gruppeb86

596 posts

30 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Great opening pic with a super backdrop.

Zoomed out shot also good.

Pablo16v

2,446 posts

214 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Yes please (although my bank account has other ideas) smile

Juan B

589 posts

21 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Nice, though I think I prefer the sleeker headlights on the previous one. This looks a bit bog eyed. Similarly don't like how the new Granturismo has gone from agressive looking headlights to bigger vertical ones too.


Bispoto

110 posts

89 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Interesting comment from you wistec1 reference your DBS.

I too had a similar disappointing ownership in a DBS Volante and went into a manual 992 GT3. No regrets there.

Sadly despite having had 3 Astons, a V12 Vantage, a Vanguish S and then the DBS it will take a lot to get me back into one, especially at that price.

FWIW I took a fairly heavy spanking on the DBS and it is that as much as anything else that has really put me off. I can see this going the same way in due course, no matter how good it is.

That said well done Aston. I hope it sells well for you.

cayman-black

13,182 posts

233 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Grange at Brentwood has this spec car in there showroom , its stunning.

alscar

6,893 posts

230 months

Monday 30th December 2024
quotequote all
Familymad said:
Driveway 911 and garage queen Vantage. Just wouldn’t feel right leaving an Aston on the drive…. like leaving your dog out in the garden and not the house?!?

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202412237... first one on A/T. Looks to be a Works collection in the shots. Are they offloading some already like the Emira pre reg Lotus sell off?

Edited by Familymad on Monday 30th December 08:56
At that price they are barely discounting the rrp including the PPF and Ceramic which would have been in house I think.

neil1jnr

1,485 posts

172 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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smaller wheels, fatter sidewall please

ST330

195 posts

28 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Reading the article got to the interior shot, looking at the screens made me think Toyota, the instrument panel wouldn't look out of place in a GRYaris. I then quickly scrolled down the page to find the GRYaris which then made me scroll back to the top because I thought I'd started reading about an Aston Martin.

Love the Aston exterior, not so sure about the interior. Not that I'll ever be in the market for one. I'm sure the engine and drive would quickly make me forget about the interior.

Frogmella

299 posts

107 months

Monday 30th December 2024
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Having driven a new Vantage I can say it’s a staggering achievement compared to the last gen.

Looks aside, which are a matter of taste. The seats are far more comfortable, touch points are improved, it rides in a manner befitting of a car at this price point and type. Stepping back into a 2021 it feels like a crude stter.



Edited by Frogmella on Monday 30th December 15:02

Familymad

1,381 posts

234 months

Monday 30th December 2024
quotequote all
I’d like to try one, but I think the price point has taken it out of reach for the target audience. It was always around 911 money but it’s easily into the early £200k’s and that’s going to mean people wait for some Aston depreciated adjustment. Surely has to reduce the buyers who buy it new sadly.