RE: Aston Martin Valour for sale with £200k off

RE: Aston Martin Valour for sale with £200k off

Wednesday 18th June

Aston Martin Valour for sale with £200k off

Aston never revealed exactly how much it charged for its manual V12 homage to The Muncher - this suggests a lot


Like virtually any special edition model, it is certainly possible to regard the Aston Martin Valour with a cynical eyebrow raised. It was based on old tech, after all, yet appeared with an astronomical, seven-figure price tag despite not being (in the grand scheme of things) all that rare. It wasn’t irrefutably great to look at either - and definitely not very clever inside. But we prefer the alternative view: as Gaydon’s 110th birthday present to itself and a love letter to the purists who clamoured for nothing more than complicated than three pedals, with a giant, sledgehammer of an engine ahead of them. 

Of course, by limiting the Valour to 110 examples (one for each year of Aston’s existence) and implying that this was a real man’s supercar - i.e. one that defied the relentless march of automation by demanding that you drive it properly - the manufacturer promptly sold the entire production run before needing to show it to anyone else. And who can blame anyone lucky enough to be on the end of the phone call: here, after all, is a 715hp twin-turbo V12, marshalled by a six-speed Graziano ‘box and shoehorned into Philip K. Dick’s idea of a muscle car. 

Would you have said ‘no’, with all the money in the world at your disposal? Probably not. The original owner of this example certainly didn’t; indeed, they rolled the boat out when it came to making the car their own. According to the vendor, the chameleon-style Valhalla Andromeda Red is a £100,000 paint option alone. And that was just the jumping-off point for umpteen Q-based personalisations, which extend everywhere from the satin red-tinted carbon fibre interior trims to the bronze-tinted 21-inch honeycomb alloy wheels. 

Nevertheless, you’d still be buying it chiefly for what’s underneath all the tinsel. Sure, the platform was reheated and the diff mechanical. And the old 5.2-litre motor is now very much in the shadow of the all-singing 835hp V12 installed in the new Vanquish. We can’t even look at the infotainment screen without yelping like Pavlov's dog. But its relative hoariness (how Aston has moved in a year) almost works in its favour: there’s no option to nonchalantly paddle shift while scrolling through Instagram here, you’re going to be working that big lever like a man at the bellows - especially if you want to replicate the quoted 3.5-second-to-60mph performance. 

Hopefully, this Valour’s first keeper spent some of the 2,808 recorded miles doing exactly that before he (or indeed, she) decided it was time to move the car on. At any rate, it is said to come complete with its original book, a six-piece luggage set (naturally), spare keys, car cover, and battery conditioner - and, unsurprisingly, presents in as-new condition. Which arguably makes this one something of a bargain, based on the £200k which is claimed to have been shaved from the original price. 

We say ‘bargain’ - you’ll still need somewhere in the ballpark of £1.5m to make Valour ownership a reality. Aston never officially revealed a starting cost when it launched the car, though it suggested that initial discussions kicked off north of a million quid. If it’s hard to see how someone could get so far beyond that point, you’re not using your imagination nor applying Q division’s money-no-object markup. Better to look at this example through the eyes of someone who has been through the process of commissioning a superyacht. They’re a cynical bunch, too. But apparently just as susceptible to a love letter as the rest of us. 


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Author
Discussion

Motormouth88

Original Poster:

588 posts

74 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
I’m sure a lot of people will disagree but I think that looks absolutely incredible especially in that colour.

GTEYE

2,246 posts

224 months

Wednesday 18th June
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To me that looks a tough sell in that spec. Each to their own, but not for me.

How quickly the original owner moved it on “might” be a sign that they didn’t much care for it either.

Edited by GTEYE on Wednesday 18th June 07:14

LooneyTunes

8,221 posts

172 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
£200k discount from new price when there’s £100k of paint? That’s only going to appeal to someone who places real value on the colour.

Hats off to the original owner though: spending that much on paint that’d be tricky to repair is proper commitment.

Orchardab

586 posts

140 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
That colour is terrible.

Twinair

861 posts

156 months

Wednesday 18th June
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What an odd thing? I don’t know much about these.

Super wealthy people do - do ‘odd things’ with their excessive wealth though… (In my bit of experience with the super wealthy)

VXR8 with wrap & £1,450,000 back to bank? Idk?

Nickp82

3,576 posts

107 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Motormouth88 said:
I m sure a lot of people will disagree but I think that looks absolutely incredible especially in that colour.
I absolutely agree , stunning car.

GreatScott2016

1,849 posts

102 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
A real mishmash in design. Subjective I know, but it’s a simple no from me.

86wasagoodyear

711 posts

110 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Almost like the owner specced it while at a powder-fuelled party on a yacht. Now regrets it. Ooops.

chrisironside

812 posts

176 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
A £100 000 paint option??!.... Aye, ok. paperbag

WPA

11,829 posts

128 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
A real mishmash in design plus the colour is not helping, it does nothing for me

TheMilkyBarKid

733 posts

43 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
I'm in the no camp I'm afraid, especially given the likely cost. With my imaginary millions I'm having both a new Vantage and a classic V8 Vantage and change for a nice house by the sea. Yes, yes, I know that's not how it works for the super wealthy... hehe

dunnoreally

1,275 posts

122 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Front end styling with the clashing grille surround is very Rover 200 BRM.

smilo996

3,332 posts

184 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Unlike the Alpine. A bazillion winglets and a gopping mouth....says much about the buyers.
A design mess.

NGK210

3,873 posts

159 months

Wednesday 18th June
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£100k, for paint? Setting aside the ‘Aston tax’ and ‘reassuringly expensive’ guff, how and why did it cost £100k?

Chris Peacock

3,040 posts

148 months

Wednesday 18th June
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I think it's really close to looking fantastic, but it just looks a bit of a mess. The wheels are also terrible.

AmazingGrace

202 posts

18 months

Wednesday 18th June
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Do the super rich get bored easily?

That would’ve taken some time to spec, perhaps the enjoyment was in the buying process….

Arsecati

2,614 posts

131 months

Wednesday 18th June
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It's hard to imagine a scenario where the words 'chav' and '£1m+ Supercar' would share the same sentence.......... but there ya go.

CharverDeeksWorth

771 posts

153 months

Wednesday 18th June
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As an experiment in how to spend money when it’s no object I’d say this ticks a lot of boxes. Colour, not for everyone but most things these days polarise opinion, not a good thing but it’s a colour so not going to kill anyone so that’s okay. I think because it looks like very little on the road it would certainly turn heads, plus I bet it goes like the clappers. I wouldn’t pay one and a half for it but I think it’s a thing to behold and in a world of Teslas and boring Chinese EV’s trying to take over I’d say this car ticks some of the required boxes.

J4CKO

44,247 posts

214 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Always has an air of Leepu from "ChopShop Garage" got let loose on a new Mustang to me, I mean its a striking looking thing but certain bits just make me think of that.

SpadeBrigade

759 posts

153 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
Always has an air of Leepu from "ChopShop Garage" got let loose on a new Mustang to me, I mean its a striking looking thing but certain bits just make me think of that.
Haha, absolutely agree. Something about the aesthetics of this car are just off. Doesn’t work at all IMO, and I am generally a fan of AM recent designs.