RE: Driven: Bentley Continental GT V8

RE: Driven: Bentley Continental GT V8

Tuesday 18th December 2012

Driven: Bentley Continental GT V8

A 500hp-plus V8 is a very Bentley approach to downsizing but can the Conti cope without its W12?



Despite the old adage about being chauffeured in a Rolls but driving a Bentley oneself, the Continental GT has never had any great pretensions to sports car vulgarity. Speed and Supersport specials have boosted bragging rights but power and bling do not a driver's car make. Now Bentley is going the other way with an 'entry level' model claimed to have a more sporting bent.

So there's an Audi-sourced V8 in place of the traditional W12, a 4.0-litre with 507hp and 487lb ft that, thanks to tech like cylinder deactivation and overrun alternator charging, is 40 per cent friendlier in terms of economy and emissions than the 12.

So far, so zeitgeisty, then but what of that sporting promise?

Interior is as opulent as you'd expect
Interior is as opulent as you'd expect
Figure 8
The black mesh grille, red badging and big, 'figure 8' tailpipes all mark the V8 out over its bigger brother. It's all, thankfully, pretty subtle compared with previous-generation Supersports models. More tasteful alternatives to the gaudy black and silver wheels and unique to the V8 Dragon Red paintwork are available too.

Inside everything's knurled, chromed, quilted, hand-stitched, or clad in real wood veneer. A huge amount of kit comes as standard, too - we particularly liked the seats, which offered heating, air conditioning and a massage function, as well as full electrical adjustment. Less impressive was the infotainment system, which had a predilection for annoying quirks. It wasn't the only foible, either. On more than one occasion, the self-closing boot didn't. And one attempt to raise and lower the rear spoiler for the purposes of ... ahem ... showing off, resulted in it jerking up and down briefly, then staying stubbornly in its upright position, before dropping unbidden back into its recess several minutes later.

New V8 twin-turbo feels pretty good
New V8 twin-turbo feels pretty good
Less is more?
Moving on, can you live with a Conti that's effectively four cylinders down? The answer is yes. Big, creamy spoonfuls of yes, actually, with more yes on top. The noise is tremendous; prod the throttle a little and the auto 'box changes down to reward you with a bassy thrum. Push further, and it grows into a warbling, crackling gurgle that works itself up to a murderous roar. 62mph comes up in 4.8sec - remarkable for a car which weighs 2,250kg - while top in top is 188mph. The power and torque are always instant and crushing; it never feels as though it's going to run out of breath.

So the engine ticks the boxes then. What about the rest of the car? Well, it has to be said that the speed with which you can punt the V8 down a lane is astonishing, given its size. The four-wheel-drive system never offers anything less than rock-solid stability and sure-footedness, allowing the power to be used to instant and devastating effect whenever you need it. There's no oversteer to speak of and only the merest whiff of understeer if you really push on hard. The suspension offers four settings, and the most sporting of these do a great job of disguising the car's mass, giving you the confidence to bowl into corners at faintly unbelievable speeds.

Driving experience is good, but not perfect
Driving experience is good, but not perfect
More speed, sir?
But the Bentley still doesn't quite involve you in the experience as much as you'd like it to. You get the sense that the car beneath you is rather like a giant technological butler, sorting everything out and leaving you simply to prod the throttle and turn the wheel as much or as little as you desire. While it's still exhilarating thanks to that fantastic engine noise and the endless grip, it's always a whisker away from being truly seat-of-your-pants good fun. If that’s what you’re looking for, an Aston Martin V8 Vantage S or a BMW M6 might be a better bet – and they’re £23,000 and £30,000 cheaper respectively.  That said, you’ll have to plough into the options list to get either to the same level of specification. Merc’s CL63 AMG comes with more toys, but costs similar money to the Conti. It feels smaller and more malleable in the twisties, and its engine is a cracker, but the rest of the car does lack the Bentley’s pomp and circumstance.

The Conti V8 isn't the sports car Bentley would like you to think it is, then. But to be honest, you'd probably already guessed that. It's in its element cruising at high speed on an autobahn; mash the throttle, allow the eight-speed ZF gearbox to find the right gear, and spurt up to 150 on demand, spouting V8 burbles into the cabin as you go. While it doesn't quite cosset you in splendid isolation the rest of the time - there's a touch too much tyre noise for that - it always feels big, solid and impressively grand.

So, a car to drive rather than to be driven in? Yes - but don't expect any surprises. Like all Bentleys, this one's best enjoyed on long, open roads rather than short, twisty ones. At £13,000 less than the W12, though, and with that vast improvement in fuel economy, the V8 now feels like the one to have.


BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT V8
Engine:
3,993cc V8, twin-turbo, direct injection
Transmission: 8-speed auto,four-wheel-drive
Power (hp): 507hp@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 487@1,700rpm
0-62mph: 4.8sec
Top speed: 188mph
Weight: 2,295kg
MPG: 26.9mpg (NEDC combined)
CO2: 246g/km
Price: £123,850 before options






Author
Discussion

E38Ross

Original Poster:

35,049 posts

212 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
lovely car. but are all the people on the M6 thread coming to say that this is too heavy for a 2 door GT car and it's no good? hehe

i'd have one in a heart beat, though i've never been overly keen on the styling.

Matt UK

17,686 posts

200 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Doubt I'll ever be in a market for such a car and have never driven one, but weirdly the GT appeals more to me as a V8 than a W12.

Flatinfourth

591 posts

138 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Nice to see the Audi Quattro is continuing to evolve!!

Flatinfourth

591 posts

138 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Love the W12, even if its not a W12 at all, actually more of a VR12... little bit saucy that, this engine is more related to a VW sharan than a Napier Lion

Flatinfourth

591 posts

138 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Up on the ramp and in the way it drives its as much an audi quattro as any other audi quattro

Scrof

197 posts

154 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
doogz said:
So, is it RWD or 4WD?
4WD - my bad. Now edited!

Amirhussain

11,487 posts

163 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Matt UK said:
Doubt I'll ever be in a market for such a car and have never driven one, but weirdly the GT appeals more to me as a V8 than a W12.
Same, for some reason I just prefer the V8 over the W12

Scrof

197 posts

154 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Matt UK said:
Doubt I'll ever be in a market for such a car and have never driven one, but weirdly the GT appeals more to me as a V8 than a W12.
I feel the same. Why do you think that is, though? I wondered whether it was something to do with the fact that in my lifetime, fast Bentleys were always V8s, so perhaps a fast Bentley V8 just has a fundamental rightness for me that the W12 doesn't? Meh, I'm probably talking bks, as per usual.

Flatinfourth

591 posts

138 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
i'm fairly certain the pair of VR6s on a common crank thing is right, i suppose i find the idea a little annoying. the close angle vee idea was a Lancia engineering triumph long before VW tried to reinvent it, try a Fulvia some time!!. Then having ripped off Lancia's work to then attach a Napier Lion 'W' tag to it to give it some Napier Railton british credibility is even more distasteful. But aside from that it is one of the nicest evolutions of Audi's quattro format, rather as Astons DB7 was arguably a nice evolution of the XJS - and it saved Aston, as the Continental has saved the Bentley brand

NGK210

2,911 posts

145 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Hmm, assume the V8 would respond well to a credible/sensible/modest remap? An extra 60bhp and 50lb-ft would do nicely.

405dogvan

5,326 posts

265 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
I'm sure this is lovely - but I still reckon the issue with the Conti is that it's just not a bespoke British car, or at least didn't feel like one to me.

It felt like a really, really, really well made Volkswagen - otherwise known as an Audi I guess...

The old engine had some fun in it tho - as the young chap in a bodykitted and 'ptshing' Supra discovered as he egged me into a small test of acceleration once (I was in a stock Conti - no fancy sporty ones).

The Supra was grey IIRC - a small grey spot to be more precise - oh my did that Bentley pick up it's skirts and go like almost nothing else I've ever driven...

NGK210

2,911 posts

145 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Hmm, assume the V8 would respond well to a credible/sensible/modest remap? An extra 60bhp and 50lb-ft would do nicely.

NGK210

2,911 posts

145 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Hmm, assume the V8 would respond well to a credible/sensible/modest remap? An extra 60bhp and 50lb-ft would do nicely.

Jimhughes

40 posts

140 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Stunning car looks amazing in that colour too but is it just me that thinks the wheels look awful? Just no where near classy enough for a Bentley in my opinion anyway!

Jimhughes

40 posts

140 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Ah just fully read the article looks like Alex agrees!

MycroftWard

5,983 posts

213 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
It's certainly an impressive car in many ways. But the look of the thing doesn't feel special to me now that the GT is 10 years old and you can buy an early one for sub £25k.

It's a similar problem to that which Aston have, why would I want to buy a new Virage when an extremely similar and I'd say better looking early DB9 can be had for £30k.

theboyrob

245 posts

165 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
NGK210 said:
Hmm, assume the V8 would respond well to a credible/sensible/modest remap? An extra 60bhp and 50lb-ft would do nicely.
Surely 500bhp is enough? Some people are never happy! wink

Caulkhead

4,938 posts

157 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
The W12 always left me cold but I really like the V8, especially the very un-Bentley like noise.

dinkel

26,932 posts

258 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Mmmh, shorten it a bit and leave out the backseat . . . Make a DHC. Great use of the S8 mill, which is a peach.

franki68

10,380 posts

221 months

Tuesday 18th December 2012
quotequote all
Not driven a v8 one but have an 04 plate one sat on my drive (long story) and driving that I forgot how incredible their high speed stability is ,I am lucky in having owned or driven a fair few high performance cars ,but at high speed stability wise nothing comes close to the Bentley gt.