RE: Aston Martin Rapide Revisited
RE: Aston Martin Rapide Revisited
Thursday 18th March 2010

Aston Martin Rapide Revisited

Chris-R casts a curious eye over Aston's latest four door



Anyone remember the old 1970s Hustlers? No, I don't mean that stack of well-thumbed magazines you keep in the shed, I'm talking about the modular Mini-based six-wheeled kit car launched by Interstyle.

I went to look at one the other day and had a friendly chat with the owner as to whether rarity should confer greater value on it than the sum (and condition) of its oddly multiplied parts. Sadly we disagreed, so although sorely tempted, I was spared having to explain another dubious acquisition to a sceptical missus-R.

But my brush with the Hustler did leave me wondering why it is that so many automotive novelties remain just that, in spite of an often obvious 'schoolboy' appeal. Most people don't share my latent enthusiasm for 'amphibians' either, although who could argue with the premise of a car that drives on water?


Pleasingly however, the overlooked-by-history-Hustler was designed by one William Towns, a connection that leads conveniently (via the even more fabulous Aston Martin Lagonda that Towns also penned) to the subject of this article and the newest four-door production car to leave the Aston Mart... er, the Magna-Steyr factory in Austria.

The Rapide may not share its angular ancestor's radical concept car styling, but the fundamental philosophy is perhaps even more idiosyncratic; the new model arriving to fill a previously unnoticed niche in the market place for a genuine four-door sports car. So how did everybody miss that one for the last 100-odd years?


Well who cares, because having 'oohed' and 'aahed' with the rest of the media when the Rapide concept was first unwrapped at the Detroit motor show all the way back in 2006, it's with some anticipation that four years and bit later I find myself clutching the remote 'Emotion Control Unit' in readiness for PH's first UK drive of this intriguing new machine. But first I'm going to 'oggle' at it.

There's no doubt it's a beautiful car in the metal - a low, swoopy, exotically surfaced machine that is about as close to an automotive sculpture as you'll find in production, especially in our test car's 'hewn-from-metal' grey. Is it as beautiful as the DB9 coupe from which it has been developed though? Well, that's a tough call, but I'd say the Rapide seems a teeny bit more contemporary at least, with the extended side strake and crisply drawn doorlines adding a dash of dynamism to that extended side profile.


(The softly radiused trailing edges of the DB9 doors now seem a little woolly in comparison, don't you think?) Others have suggested the Rapide has a couple of less than successful angles, but I think they're being over-picky.

One reason the Rapide looks so stunning, of course, is that it's all so close to the ground. We parked it next to our Jaguar XFR and the usually sleek saloon 'bulked up' noticeably in the Aston's presence. This lowness is accentuated by the Aston's significant 5m length, but there's no issue with proportion - the Rapide just looks 'right'.

The trade-off for all this wanton design comes on the inside which is less-than Tardis-like. I'm an unusually large specimen at 6'4", but there's a big floor-to-ceiling central pillar that you don't find on a DB9 and I suspect the front doors are a tad shorter, too. With the seat all the way back, and the wheel fully extended, it became a bit of a chore to get in and out. I wouldn't have minded straining to get into a 'traditional' supercar or coupe so much - it comes with the territory - but isn't the point of four doors to increase the practicality, not lessen it? I sat in the back seat briefly just to prove I could, whereas PHers Garlick and Stuart claimed to fit comfortably and both reckoned they could have lasted an hour or so before claustrophobia or the need to stretch set in.


It's no Porsche Panamera then, but for occasional or shorter trips the Rapide is suitably accommodating.

The luggage area under the rear hatch is interesting too, with fold flat rear seatbacks and an extendable floor to cover both them and the rear centre console. Thus equipped, the Rapide offers a significant amount of load space - at least for an exotic 2+2, if not for a 5m saloon. (Somehow I can't bring myself to refer to an Aston as a hatchback.)

Once out on the road, the Rapide genuinely offers performance worthy of the Aston brand. Its low centre of gravity means the car corner will corner hard and fast, and with very little body roll. There's a sport mode for the damping, but it takes the edge off an otherwise superbly supple ride and seems a little out of kilter with the four-door concept. The steering is direct and well weighted, and the six-speed auto transmission changes swiftly and smoothly in auto or paddle-shift manual modes. You can read more about the driving experience here, which next to the styling is the Rapide's strongest suit. The Aston V12 sounds glorious when extended, too.


All of which is probably enough to make the four-door sports car concept a runaway success for Aston, although I can't help wondering whether - without the brand and that gorgeous styling - the world would be gently amused by its 'practical' pretensions.

Don't get me wrong, I think this is a fabulous car that looks terrific, drives superbly and drips with exclusivity. But I don't expect to see many Rapides travelling 'four up', and I can't help but wonder whether the limited extra practicality it offers over a 2+2 will really add up to proper raison d'etre once the novelty has worn off.







 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Author
Discussion

6th Gear

Original Poster:

3,572 posts

217 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
What a Beauty

drewcole81

342 posts

229 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Looks much nicer than the porker.

chandrew

980 posts

232 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
If you want a car that is mainly used for 2 but needs occasional space for grandchildren then it would seem a good fit. For this how many 2+2s are there really around? When I was thinking of a 2+2 last year then the only new cars with any sort of leg-space in the back seemed to be the Ferrari 612 and the Maserati.

What I find most interesting is that given the big growth in wealth is in Asia, and that many people in countries like India and China buy cars to be driven you'd have thought they'd have at least designed something a bit more suitable at opening up these markets. I guess as it stands it appeals more to buyers in existing markets.

soad

34,343 posts

199 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
drewcole81 said:
Looks much nicer than the porker.
Damn right.

What a stunner. cloud9

Stu R

21,427 posts

238 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
It feels incredibly wrong to say, but I really don't like the Rapide. In fact I'll go one further and say I'm bored by Aston's styling now. I know they're nice, and I still wouldn't say no to owning one, but where they once used to *almost* bring about a lazy lob-on, they barely get a second look now from me.

I'll get me coat. frown

ZesPak

26,006 posts

219 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Looks nice, but I have to agree with the writer.
Why go this way and then not make it very practical?

I don't mind an Aston without a descent boot, but to buy such a car would be a family car. And that boot entrance is just a joke.

(i can't believe I'm picking on the practicality of an Aston)

I'll get my coat too.

getmecoat

TheRoadWarrior

1,242 posts

201 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
ZesPak said:
Looks nice, but I have to agree with the writer.
Why go this way and then not make it very practical?

I don't mind an Aston without a descent boot, but to buy such a car would be a family car. And that boot entrance is just a joke.

(i can't believe I'm picking on the practicality of an Aston)

I'll get my coat too.

getmecoat
But on the other hand, what if it'd been totally practical but looked like a dog and didnt handle... what would people say then? They say the same; whats the point of a practical Aston.. I might as well have got a volvo and saved ~90k!

Gun

13,432 posts

241 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
I heart this car cloud9

//dean

1,063 posts

219 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
I realise that it's the 'style'of PH, but some of the reviews could really do with some proper photography..this one included.

That said, good review smile

The Wookie

14,187 posts

251 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
drewcole81 said:
Looks much nicer than the porker.
To be fair I'd be more impressed if it didn't look better than the Porker.

BigI

80 posts

212 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Surely the real benefit of these cars is not luggage space, it's the fact that you and 3 mates can travel at supercar speeds rather than shoehorning them into a 2+2 or having to have a Bentley Coupe,

they are just afterall play things of the rich, who needs practicality?

FourWheelDrift

91,834 posts

307 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
ZesPak said:
Why go this way and then not make it very practical?

I don't mind an Aston without a descent boot, but to buy such a car would be a family car. And that boot entrance is just a joke.

(i can't believe I'm picking on the practicality of an Aston)

I'll get my coat too.

getmecoat
But it's not a family car, it's a 2+2, a 2 seater that might occasionally take 3 or 4 when needed. That makes it practical. No one will buy this as an only family car. They will have their Range Rover/S Class/other as the family car.


Edited by FourWheelDrift on Thursday 18th March 13:08

toppstuff

13,698 posts

270 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
soad said:
drewcole81 said:
Looks much nicer than the porker.
Damn right.

What a stunner. cloud9
But you can get full sized people in the Porsche and ask them to stay there for a couple of hours.

I would not inflict 3 hours in the back of a Rapide on my friends or colleagues.

For dashing around the area and carrying your mates to the pub , the Rapide is perfect.

For taking a family of grown up sized people, or friends, for an extended trip to Le Mans or the South of France the Aston fails totally.

As a result, I am with the band of people that like the look of the car but would never buy one.

It neither fish nor fowl, neither a spacious long distance express or a sportscar, but something in between. That may be fine for some, but not for me.

The Panamera may not be as pretty, or as fun to own, but it is more fit for the purpose of carrying adults long distances.

For many people in this market, I suspect they will keep their DBS plus a Range Rover in the garage rather than bothering with a Rapide.

I would anyway. Still, maybe I'm wrong and they will hundreds of the things...

Neil1300R

5,628 posts

201 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
ZesPak said:
Looks nice, but I have to agree with the writer.
Why go this way and then not make it very practical?

I don't mind an Aston without a descent boot, but to buy such a car would be a family car. And that boot entrance is just a joke.

(i can't believe I'm picking on the practicality of an Aston)

I'll get my coat too.

getmecoat
It is practical - for an Aston. Most Aston owners have at least one other more practical family car. The Rapdide allows the family / mates to come out in the car as well. If you were going on holiday to France (as an example) with wife, two kids for a week, then the Rapide is not the car of choice. If its for taking 3 mates down the pub/ wife and one kid for a long weekend etc its the ideal car. Lots of research done by Aston before making it, they found a niche for owners that needed 4 doors to get kids in / child seats etc - not practical on a 2+2.

If its just the wife / OH going to the continent for 10 days, more than enough room for luggage in a V8 vantage.

Justayellowbadge

37,057 posts

265 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Do you have a link to the Hustler?

Stu R

21,427 posts

238 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Justayellowbadge said:
Do you have a link to the Hustler?
www.aronline.co.uk/index.htm?townshustlerf.htm

you'll wish you hadn't asked.

Edited by Stu R on Thursday 18th March 12:02

Frimley111R

18,403 posts

257 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Revisted??

Justayellowbadge

37,057 posts

265 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Stu R said:
Justayellowbadge said:
Do you have a link to the Hustler?
www.aronline.co.uk/index.htm?townshustlerf.htm

you'll wish you hadn't asked.

Edited by Stu R on Thursday 18th March 12:02
No, the one for sale.

I love them, especially the V12.

Garlick

40,601 posts

263 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
Frimley111R said:
Revisted??
yes

Original story here http://www.pistonheads.com/roadtests/doc.asp?c=113...

Mr Will

13,719 posts

229 months

Thursday 18th March 2010
quotequote all
In my eyes the Rapide is not a 2+2, it is quite possible to get 4 adults in comfortably even if those in the back do not have acres of room.

I'm ~6ft tall and although getting in and out of the back was a bit of a squeeze, once I was in there it was cosy (mainly due to the high transmission tunnel) but there was enough room to sit comfortably. I'd say that there was roughly the same leg room as there is in the back of a Focus, definitely more than you would find in Mini or even my Mercedes 190.