RE: Aston Martin DB7 | The Brave Pill

RE: Aston Martin DB7 | The Brave Pill

Saturday 21st March 2020

Aston Martin DB7 | The Brave Pill

Brawny, British, brave and a bargain!



You'll forgive a good looking car much more readily than you will an ugly one. That's a sentiment that any low-cost DB7 is likely to test on a regular basis, with this week's Pill being both as cheap and courageous as any Aston Martin gets. As a six-cylinder auto, it is fitted with what the market regards as the least attractive DB7 powertrain combination, while it also carries a 101,000 mile odometer reading that the more timid will view as unduly high for this rarefied bit of the market. More alarm will be caused by an MOT history which indicates some substantial structural issues in the car's recent past. Yet it also wears a price tag appealing enough to negate a whole heap of risk: this is a £14,000 Aston Martin. For context, the cheapest version of the gussied up Toyota iQ that is the Cygnet is being offered for 50 per cent more.

Those who were confidently predicting a rise in DB7 values years ago have grown grey beards while they wait. While prices for other near-classics from the era have increased, sometimes substantially, only the later V12 DB7 Vantage and its last-of-line GT variant have staged a resurgence. Early cars are still in the doldrums, in large part due to the number of aluminium-bodied DB9s and Vantages that have fallen into the low-20s. There's lots to love about the DB7, but it's never going to have the appeal of its better-engineered successors.

Over the years plenty of models have been credited with saving the companies that created them. But none did so as spectacularly as the DB7, a car that turned the company which produced it from a cottage industry into one of the luxury segment's major forces. What makes that even more impressive is that it wasn't even supposed to be an Aston Martin.


By the early 1990s Aston was practically in hibernation, selling such small volumes of its wedgey GTs that annual production sometimes failed to get into three figures. Although Ford had bought the company in 1987, it was struggling to know what to do with its aristocratic offshoot, especially as it ploughed money into its other British acquisition, Jaguar. canning a putative F-Type sportscar, Ford asked TWR - Tom Walkinshaw's race team turned engineering consultancy - to design an upmarket Jaguar GT which was intended to replace the aged XJ-S. The job went to a little-known designer called Ian Callum, who had given up a safe but supremely dull corporate job sketching door handles and headlights at Ford to jump to the more exciting world of TWR. His first project there was a new tractor; his second would be this sportscar.

But then things went wrong. Jaguar had been burned by the cost of the XJ-220 project and the early 1990s recession, so the company's senior management decided not to take it to market. After some behind the scenes lobbying, involving both Callum and Tom Walkinshaw, Aston's canny chairman Walter Hayes got the project turned over to him, with the idea of creating a new entry-level model. The total development budget was just £30m - a tiny amount for such a big project, even in those days - with the DB7 to be built in the unit at Bloxham that had previously been used for the XJ220.

It was launched in 1994 and was an immediate hit, increasing Aston's sales by several hundred percent. But the initial critical froth, and excitement due to any new Aston, did glossome fairly egregious failures. The DB7's cabin was cramped and poorly packaged, and slatherings of wood and leather couldn't hide low-rent parts bin components and the sort of hand-built hit and miss build quality that comes from hitting and (sometimes) missing. On the outside, Callum had done a remarkable job with what he had to work with - Jeremy Clarkson's line about the DB7 being the "most beautiful man-made object on the planet" stuck with it for years. But the compromises involved in doing so much with so little were still obvious, especially the size of the front and rear overhangs beyond the relatively short wheelbase - at 2,591mm this was identical to the XJ-S. It was still possible to spot plenty of areas where costs had been pared back, including the famous reuse of Mazda rear lights.


The engine was a supercharged 3.2-litre derivative of Jaguar's 24-Valve AJ6 engine, the power output of 335hp ensuring that it delivered more than both Aston's naturally-aspirated V8 of the period, and also (just) the run-out 6.0-litre version of the V12 XJS. It was effective, but short on finesse, getting loud and whiny when pushed hard and hitting its wall at a lowly 6,000rpm. A manual gearbox was standard, but many buyers opted for the auto, the first owner our of Pill being one of them. This was a slushy four-speeder that really took the edge off performance, the 6.9-second 0-62mph time being more than a second adrift of the 5.7-second time the manual recorded. (Post '97 cars, like this one, got a slightly snappier gearbox, but still with only four speeds.)

Handling was widely praised by the era's road testers, although at least some of that was down to the subjective improvement over previous Astons, rather than any measure of objective excellence. Compared to the aluminium-bodied cars that followed it, the DB7 feels heavy and reluctant to change direction quickly, it is also not especially rigid, even in coupe form. The later Volante convertible had the structural strength of a very fast biscuit tin.

The six-cylinder DB7 played a critical role for Aston, though, not least in persuading Ford management to invest the considerable sums required to create what became the 'VH' aluminium architecture. But it didn't take many years for it to start feeling outdated, especially when the cheaper Jaguar XK launched and was soon being offered with a more powerful supercharged V8. That led to the creation of Aston's V12 engine - predecessor to the 5.2-litre turbo that is still being made - which was first fitted to the DB7 in 1999 to make the Vantage version. Both this and the six-cylinder were meant to be sold alongside each other, but demand switched almost totally to the brawnier motor and the 'six was quietly retired after just five years in production. The contemporary reckoning that the Vantage was the one to have has stuck ever since, with a corresponding split in prices.


Yet the early DB7 still has a huge amount going for it, including almost all of the design of the later cars and the specialness that comes with any of the company's products. Driving any Aston turns you into the star of your own show, and the next owner of this one is likely to receive nearly as many favourable comments as they would had they spent ten times as much on a brand new DB11. Our Pill is showing the faded headlight covers that often afflict earlier cars, and would certainly benefit from a proper scrubbing-up, but the combination of dark blue paint and magnolia hide is a good one, and the vendor reports a recent spray at the front to cover stone chips.

Claims of other recent expenditure include a £4K invoice, with no further details. The fact the MOT before last reported significant corrosion in critical areas - which had disappeared by the most recent test - suggests at least some of the spend was on structural work. It does show the scale of bill that can bite at pretty much any time on a car like this one, with the near certainty of annual upkeep costs representing a significant percentage of the initial purchase price. But there's more than enough gloom out there at the moment, so let's keep that positive. This is an Aston Martin being offered for the same price as a base Ford Fiesta - which would be more fun to own?


See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

sidesauce

Original Poster:

2,475 posts

218 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
To my eyes at least, this design hasn't dated well. Much prefer the DB9 aesthetically.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
That looks like a supra and probbly slower.

alorotom

11,939 posts

187 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
Can’t ever remember seeing more than 2/3 examples of these

To me this is the Ford Probe of the AM family.

Chubbyross

4,546 posts

85 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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This would require a great deal of bravery. It also looks shockingly dated to me. The natural alternative would be an XJ-S which is getting better looking as the years pass.

soad

32,894 posts

176 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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Needs two more cylinders.

swisstoni

16,985 posts

279 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
Seen on the road, these look small and elegant today. The pictures make it look like a blob.

milu

2,353 posts

266 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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Some sort of weird(nasty) bodykit?

DaveCWK

1,989 posts

174 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
Just like on the XJS, rust is a big problem on these. I've only seen a couple at car shows etc & they all had blisters around the rear arches.

Agent57

1,655 posts

154 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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Shame about the body kit.

Standard cars that have not been modified still look amazing.

sparks_190e

12,738 posts

213 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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I've seen many DB7's, love them, and they are a bargain and don't always cost the earth to run, however...

They rust. Floorpan, arches, front and rear screen edges.

The air conditioning evaporator can pack up on both the i6 and V12. Dash out job, £2-3k.

Coil packs on the V12 can fail, another circa £2k.

Some owners report module failures, particularly for the braking and lighting systems. These are increasingly hard to acquire now as numerous DB7 modules are NLA, and eye wateringly expensive if you can find them.

I do love the DB7 (not the one in the article, with it's naff bodykit) I'd wager a good one starts at around £22-£25k and should be purchased from a specialist such as Chiltern Aston.

A sub £20k V8 Vantage isn't going to be far away. That'll be the new bargain Aston.

Unsorted

298 posts

62 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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Bodykit spoils this car in my opinion. When you see them on the road they look pretty dated. The manual is a much better drive then the auto. Found them reliable, but the was long time ago, apart from trim issues.

A friends's early XK8 felt much better put together and again in my opinion look better now.

Lastly, Aston dealers charge daft figures to work on what is a pretty basic car, with many parts from lower priced vehicles and whose quirks were discovered decades ago.

All that aside as they get into low teens are probably worth a punt.

Edit re above post. You can get a V8 Vantage in high teens and that would be my choice if in the market for an Aston Martin.

Edited by Unsorted on Saturday 21st March 08:10

Venisonpie

3,269 posts

82 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
Blimey, WBAC have that at £150!

Looking at the body kit they're about right.

NigelStn

264 posts

167 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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I've owned a 1998 DB7 i6 for over 10 years and it's been great.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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All of the nice cars around this era had these ugly as hell steering wheels.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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NigelStn said:


I've owned a 1998 DB7 i6 for over 10 years and it's been great.
Lovely looking car you have there.

Dr G

15,172 posts

242 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
quotequote all
sparks_190e said:
I do love the DB7 (not the one in the article, with it's naff bodykit) I'd wager a good one starts at around £22-£25k and should be purchased from a specialist such as Chiltern Aston.
Now that sounds like bloody good value to me; 25 grand for probably the prettiest of all modern cars? I only skim read the article and I'm sure by many metrics they are objectively terrible but I still love them and I still want one. An early, straight 6 car with a manual transmission (ideally in green).

I'd also love a V600 but they're many multiples the amount of cash and by all accounts absolute rubbish. Still don't care though. Still want one.

I was 6 years old when the 90s began and almost 16 when they finished; British cars of the era left a mark on this impressionable PHer.

martin12345

603 posts

89 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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GravelMachineGun said:
All of the nice cars around this era had these ugly as hell steering wheels.
Pretty sure this is down to the airbag technology of the time

2Btoo

3,424 posts

203 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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Stupid Q but what was the jag of the same era that looked very similar?

T1berious

2,259 posts

155 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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Venisonpie said:
Blimey, WBAC have that at £150!

Looking at the body kit they're about right.
WBAC also had an E30 M3 at you, guessed it £150 - the same car actually went for 80K, make of that what you will....

Agreed the body kit is erm challenging?

cayman-black

12,642 posts

216 months

Saturday 21st March 2020
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lol, i have been looking at these lately. imo a good looking car at a bargain price. The V12 even better.