RE: Aston Martin Vanquish: Spotted

RE: Aston Martin Vanquish: Spotted

Wednesday 22nd May 2019

Aston Martin Vanquish: Spotted

A new Vantage AMR will cost £150,000, but you can get a manual, 21st century Aston Martin - with a V12, no less - for half that...



While the 2001 Geneva motor show will seem a jolly long time ago now (largely because it was), it remains a significant point in the history of Aston Martin. Because it was 18 and a bit years ago that the production Vanquish was shown to the world, faithful to the stunning concept of a few years previously; bristling with a new, assertive, assured 21st century confidence that would define Aston for more than a decade, it wasn't far off a revolution.

If the DB7 saved Aston Martin in the 1990s, then the Vanquish is the car that kicked off the renaissance that's brought us to the present day. While it was the last car built at Newport Pagnell, the Vanquish represented a more modern, slick, contemporary Aston Martin, introducing the VH architecture most notably, and promoting the cars to a whole new level of desirability. The Vanquish effectively replaced the Virage-based Vantage, as big a step change as it's almost possible to imagine while still keeping the engine in the front, the power to the back and a wheel at each corner. Traditional, slightly stuffy Aston was replaced with sharp, suave, unabashed Aston, and look where it's come from there.


The Vanquish wasn't perfect, however - nobody could deny that. Lots of those issues, some relating to the dynamics, some with the performance on the DB9's arrival and the qualms with the gearbox, were largely sorted with the 520hp Vanquish S, which are now very desirable cars - the very last Ultimate versions command up to £250k.

So why suggest spending any money on the original Vanquish, if it was so flawed? Well, beyond it being perhaps the best looking of the 21st century Astons, and a third the price of an Ultimate, this particular Vanquish has been retrofitted with the Aston Works six-speed manual gearbox; seldom seen even on Vanquish S models, it's an extremely rare find on the 460hp version, despite favourable reviews. Why? Many buyers might have seen the Vanquish's automated gearbox more in keeping with its GT remit, and unwilling to tamper with a car that substantially. There's also the small matter of the cost, Aston Works charging £23,000 for the gearbox swap. With the cars now worth less than they were - this one is for sale at £75k, and automated manual cars are less - that's a chunk to spend on work that may well reduce desirability to a lot of buyers.


But what a thing it looks for those committed to the cause. When it's the manual gearbox now being introduced as a special edition, the appeal of a V12, manual Aston Martin is surely never going to wane. Especially so given it's pretty unlikely to happen again. It looks fantastic in AML Racing Green, the selling dealer has sold it previously and the service history is thorough - though it might want another freshen up now, given the time that's passed (and miniscule mileage) since the last going over.

Even allowing for that, and the expense that will come with a V12 Aston Martin approaching 20 years old, it seems like a superb opportunity - it's a Vanquish with its biggest bugbear sorted at the factory, in a good spec, with sufficient mileage under its wheels that you need not fear adding a few more. And while the odd DB9 manual will emerge for less money than this, it doesn't have the flagship allure of a Vanquish. As for alternatives outside Aston, good luck finding a manual Ferrari 575M for less than six figures. There aren't Jaguar GTs of this performance with a manual gearbox, and the V12 Mercedes will be automatic only as well.

So while the manual Vanquish possesses far from the best gearbox in the whole wide world, it's infinitely preferable to the paddles; that appreciation will surely only increase as the years pass and automatic technology improves, making the old tech seem even more rudimentary than it does now. But three pedals and a stick, with a V12 to control and wrapped up in this shape, will never not be covetable. The next Vanquish is going to be a very different car from those which preceded it, perhaps as big a leap as was ushered in from 90s Vantage to 2000s Vanquish, and that will be fascinating to watch develop as Aston goes supercar hunting. As one of the most enticing packages from Aston Martin's First Century, though, and for not truly absurd money, this particular Vanquish will take some surpassing.




SPECIFICATION - ASTON MARTIN VANQUISH

Engine: 5,935cc V12
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 466@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 400@5,000rpm
MPG: 17. Ish
CO2: 400g/km. Give or take
First registered: 2002
Recorded mileage: 58,300
Price new: £164,349
Yours for: £75,000

See the original advert here.




 

Author
Discussion

Ryvita

Original Poster:

714 posts

210 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
That's quite the numberplate. smile

I'm not the best at decyphering these often cryptic messages, but is it supposed to be VICTORY? Perhaps a V12 owned by a Mr. Olivier Reginald-Yancy.

Or perhaps "V(-signs) I, Tory" biggrin

Edited by Ryvita on Wednesday 22 May 09:15

Europa1

10,923 posts

188 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Still (externally at least) a fabulous looking car.

Snubs

1,172 posts

139 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
As the article says, these look superb with just the right amount of muscle. I'll have one alongside a Vantage V600 please which pulled off the same styling trick. This one would do just fine:

http://www.astonmartinworks.com/heritage-sales/ast...

pSyCoSiS

3,594 posts

205 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
This (and the V600) are my all-time favourite Aston Martins.

Interior not great in terms of flimsy-looking switch gear, but what a handsome, brutish machine.

Nerdherder

1,773 posts

97 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Epic. Buy with warranty though.

Evercross

5,957 posts

64 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Not interested unless it comes with invisibility mode and machine-guns.

wink

GranCab

2,902 posts

146 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
I'm sure AML can retrofit it with pretend machine guns and invisibility cloak ... if you pay them enough.

C.MW

473 posts

69 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
I know the manual gearbox is far from the best, I'm sure its not-so-great reliability will regularly give me a headache and it will cost a fortune to maintain it but, but, my heart rules whenever I see one whether it be in pictures or in the flesh. What an attractive car for gearheads like me. Even that old school (dated) interior with analogue gauges and no buttons on the wheel only works to heighten its appeal.


Edited by C.MW on Wednesday 22 May 13:35

2 GKC

1,896 posts

105 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Fabulous looking thing but interior ruins it

Harry H

3,398 posts

156 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Lovely looking car, always admired them. Why on earth you'd want a manual box in one completely beats me though. Bloody great GT car mucking about changing gear, just don't get it. If it was lighter, smaller more pointy I could understand but someone was prepared to pay an extra £23 grand for it so it must've floated their boat.

Never driven one so can't comment on how bad the auto was but surely it can't of been that bad.




just passing by

46 posts

77 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
my neighbour bought one of these new. Still has it; says it's a brute to drive, and never uses it.
You'd need a brave pill to pay £75k for this (esp. with 58k miles on the clock!). Looks aged already, and not in a good way. Will continue to depreciate rapidly.

moskvich427

227 posts

175 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
The manual 911 Turbo S at the same dealer is where my money would go lick

Krikkit

26,527 posts

181 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Harry H said:
Lovely looking car, always admired them. Why on earth you'd want a manual box in one completely beats me though. Bloody great GT car mucking about changing gear, just don't get it. If it was lighter, smaller more pointy I could understand but someone was prepared to pay an extra £23 grand for it so it must've floated their boat.

Never driven one so can't comment on how bad the auto was but surely it can't of been that bad.
It was an automated manual, rather than a slushy auto. Truly dreadful if the period reviews are to be believed, and not reliable.

I'd much rather have a manual, after all it's not going to struggle for pull in 6th on the motorway, is it?

daveco

4,126 posts

207 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
2 GKC said:
Fabulous looking thing but interior ruins it
+1 looks like it's been lifted out of a 90s Ford laugh

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
I have driven loads of miles in both the Vanquish and the 'S'. My Vanquish s bog standard with the flappy paddle box and to be honest when you get used to it its fine. It's no DSG for sure and you have to be mechanically aware that your driving a normal gearbox with a normal clutch, which you can burn out in a day if you don't drive it right.

Treat it like a normal manual or a DSG and get your wallet out......

I don't drive mine too often but if I did I would plum for the full auto conversion that has a modern 6 speed box. This would suit the character of the car much better as its a GT car, not a sports car.

Either way, still one of the best looking cars of all time in my opinion....heres mine.....



Edited by anonymous-user on Wednesday 22 May 12:21

SweptVolume

1,091 posts

93 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
"Traditional, slightly stuffy Aston was replaced with sharp, suave, unabashed Aston, and look where it's come from there."

Traditional, yes. Stuffy, hardly; look at this brute!


mikey k

13,011 posts

216 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Lovely looking from the outside cool
Watch out for front subframe rot, its VERY expensive to fix
Manuals are like unicorns

harleywilma

519 posts

243 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
Difficult with that terrible interior to feel that you are in such beautiful car ....

V8LM

5,174 posts

209 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
My S was the least expensive fun car to run I've had. AND I sold it for 75% more than I paid for it.

GFW_7626 by v8lemon, on Flickr

Don't drive it like an automatic or DSG, and if it's a V12 Vanquish or early Vanquish S car make sure it has the gearbox sensor upgrade.

MrC986

3,492 posts

191 months

Wednesday 22nd May 2019
quotequote all
I’d want an Aston backed warranty included though the fact it’s had the factory manual conversion done surely makes it a rare car? It’s an unusual colour as well for a Vanquish. It’s properly cool though.