RE: Aston Martin DB9 Sports Pack Manual

RE: Aston Martin DB9 Sports Pack Manual

Thursday 22nd June 2006

Aston Martin DB9 Sports Pack Manual

Ian Kuah reports on this welcome upgrade to Aston Martin's iconic GT


Aston Martin DB9 Sports Pack
Aston Martin DB9 Sports Pack

With a slightly less powerful version of the sonorous V12 that powers its Vanquish big brother and styling to die for, the Aston Martin DB9 occupies a relatively unpopulated segment of the market, with only the Bentley GT as direct competition.

There is no question that despite its GT, rather than hard-core sportscar credentials, the DB9 is a more charismatic car drive than its British rival from Crewe. Its lower weight, crisp normally-aspirated V12 and intoxicating soundtrack make it a more responsive and engaging drivers’ car than the ballistic twin-turbocharged Bentley GT.

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For some drivers however, the DB9 is not focused enough, its excellent paddle-shift operated automatic transmission denies you the challenge of slotting your own ratios just so. In addition, some feel that the relatively good ride was achieved at the expense of ultimate handling prowess on the limit.

Hard core

However, Aston Martin now offers a two prong counter-attack to address these issues for hard-core drivers, in the form of a Sports Pack suspension upgrade and the six-speed manual gearbox promised at the outset. Our test car had both these options, which dramatically change the character of the DB9.

The manual gearbox is the Italian-made Graziano six-speed and specifying it turns the DB9 into a much more concentrated drivers' car, while saving you £3,000 on the £106,000 list price of the Auto version. The Sports Pack adds £2,495.

On this very low mileage test car, it was slightly notchy in first and second, but this should improve with use. On the move there is no problem finding the gears and in fact, the harder you drive the better the change gets.

Engaging reverse gear takes more effort though. It is found by pushing the lever down, away from you and up, which is awkward. The pattern was obviously designed for left-hand-drive cars where the movement is a more natural push down, pull towards you and up.

Progressive responses

One thing the Aston Martin engineers have got down pat is the pedals, and you can get a great deal of satisfaction from squeezing the strong and progressive brakes firmly towards a bend and executing a perfect heel and toe downshift, the responsive V12 emitting a crisp vroom as you blip the throttle. As with the auto, the clutch is a twin plate mounted on a single mass flywheel, that encourages good engine response.

The e-gas throttle mapping was not perfect on our test car. Although the motor blipped perfectly under load such as when doing a heel and toe downshift, blipping the throttle at idle often produced a big hole in response before the motor picked up. This sometimes made it hard to get the revs up to the right point to do a normal take off from rest.

We have always considered the Aston Martin V12 to be one of the world’s great engines. It certainly makes a great noise, and on the launch in France, we could not help looking for walls, cliffs and tunnels to act as a sounding board for its sonorous bark.

Noise and power

It still makes that bark when you start it up, but we could not quite replicate the amazing symphony of induction roar and hard edged exhaust howl that we heard on that mountain road north of Monte Carlo. Are English walls inherently less musical than French ones or has Aston Martin tamed the production exhaust system?

Nonetheless, the power band is fantastic and seems even better without the pumping losses of a torque converter. There is real grunt in every gear and sending the revs soaring towards the red line before snatching the next ratio is to indulge in an act of pure ecstasy.

Execute a perfect launch and 60mph comes up in 4.7 sec (0-100km/h in 4.9 sec), 0.2 sec faster than the self-shifter version (0-100km/h in 5.1 sec). Top speed is the same at 186mph (300km/h).

Since there is an LED gear position indicator in the instrument pack between the speedometer and rev counter on the automatic version, Aston Martin did not see any reason why it should not be used as an up shift warning indicator on the manual. So as you approach the red line, from 6500 and 7000rpm, one, two and then three red bars appear in the indicator to announce that it is time to find the next gear.

Uprated hardware

The Sports Pack provides 6mm shorter springs uprated by 68 percent in front and 64 percent at the rear, with the bump stops modified to suit.

The front anti roll bar is reduced in diameter from 26.5mm to 25.5mm, while the rear remains unchanged at 25.2mm. This has the effect of reducing understeer and sharpening turn-in. The dampers are uprated to accommodate the new spring and anti-roll bar settings.

In reality, the increased spring rates end up having slightly more effect on stiffness than those raw numbers suggest because the new five-spoke alloy wheels and titanium wheel nuts reduce unsprung weight at each corner by around five percent. The wheel and tyre sizes are unchanged with 8.0J and 9.0J x 19-inch alloys shod with 235/40ZR19 and 275/35ZR19 Bridgestone tyres.

The final change is an a load-bearing aluminium panel that replaces the composite undertray and acts as an structural stiffening member to counter the greater loads fed into the shell by the uprated suspension.

Handling

On smooth roads, the Sports Pack suspension does what it says on the tin brilliantly. Turn-in is noticeably crisper on tighter bends and cornering is flatter, with fabulous poise in long fast bends.

Limit handling is also more progressive, and with the same limited slip differential working away at the back end, power oversteer feels more predictable and easy to modulate. In combination with the more direct response to your right foot via the manual gearbox, the change in the cars character tips the balance towards sportscar.

However, on bumpy roads a price is extracted in terms of ride comfort. On the short, sharp undulations so typical of England’s crumbling roads, the secondary ride of the Sports Pack equipped car is noticeably more lively and restless.

The increased stiffness also means you can set the traction control light flashing when you are pressing on over bumpy surfaces at speed, even in a straight line.

This problem manifests itself mainly at the back end, and in fact we were impressed with the lack of steering reaction to bumps and cambers despite the wide rubber. The engineers obviously did a better job with the front axle kinematics.

Too much?

Since the Sports Pack enhances cornering behaviour significantly on smoother roads, it will have great appeal to customers who live in countries like Germany. But for the normal DB9 driver who is more of an Aston Martin fan than a hard core driving enthusiast, the Sports Pack suspension may be too much of a good thing.

On the right roads, the more you put into driving this car, the greater the rewards. In fact, after one inspired cross country dash, we could not help thinking how much the experience conjured up images of a modern day Ferrari Daytona but one with good brakes.

Author
Discussion

ed.

Original Poster:

2,173 posts

238 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
Thats a radical interior change

Sonic Nonsense

282 posts

225 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
ed. said:
Thats a radical interior change


Hehe, beat me to it!

cpt

10 posts

225 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
And it says Ascari on the radio cover..hmmm

Beefmeister

16,482 posts

230 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
Plus they are all just press shots, most of them aren't even of the SPort Pack DB9, if any.

Poor form!!!

kahmed79

22 posts

280 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
Hmm, does the Auto really have a twin plate clutch?

r988

7,495 posts

229 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
cpt said:
And it says Ascari on the radio cover..hmmm


It's the missing Ascari interior shot from last week, I guess we wont see the Aston interior until next week then.

Either way sounds like an improvement, there is just something satisfying about changing your own gears, especially on a lazy V12 GT

manek

2,972 posts

284 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
Sorry about the pic problem, some glitch with cacheing I think. Should now be fixed. Let me know if you still see the wrong pic.

Update: pics now all completely replaced and are the correct ones. Apologies all.

Manek
PH Editor

Edited by manek on Thursday 22 June 17:07

oldgriff

35 posts

261 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
I've got an early DB9, auto and I'd have to say the suspension sounds very worthwhile. But I'd disagree about the manual 'box. As a former loather of autos (as a griff driver you have to be!) I'd have save to say I am completely converted by the Aston. in "manual" mode it is simply fantastic and the torque convertor doesn't seem to blunt the performance at all - especially in Sport mode. You find yourself downshifting for no reason other than to hear the engine management system blip the throttle - Fantastic! And in town it makes the car a joy to drive. So, take my advice - stick with auto - but I'd certainly go for the handling pack!

alecbarclay

54 posts

218 months

Thursday 22nd June 2006
quotequote all
This Aston looks like it has just replaced the Ferrari 612 Scaglieti, which is also available as a 6 speed manual (although it will be a bit shy on the bhp front - but I do like the idea of being in charge of the gear changing thing.....), in my lottery winners garage - and I have saved myself £70k - which means I am half way to sticking a classic DB5 in the corner of said garage!! ................isn't it great to have a dream?

jhough

27 posts

279 months

Saturday 24th June 2006
quotequote all
I was hoping the linked-to pictures would be, I dunnow, big or something.

Dr S

4,997 posts

226 months

Sunday 25th June 2006
quotequote all
Lurvely piece of metal. Sports pack a must have, though. Read the article in Evo on the same car. No issues with ride and handling on English roads they had...

clorenzen

3,673 posts

235 months

Monday 26th June 2006
quotequote all
Oldgriff,

Totally agree. I have a touchtronic DB9 and that gearbox is fantastic. It shifts up through the gears without you noticing anything other than seamless power and traction (much different to my previous TipS 996 which always put you in the wrong gear) and when in manual mode the car changes character and becomes are very poised (and loud) GT. I see the point of a stiffer suspension but compared to the Porsche it is already quite hard. I am also concerned about the lowered ride as I am touching the ground quite often on London roads and driveways. Love the car.

dinkel

26,932 posts

258 months

Tuesday 27th June 2006
quotequote all
jhough said:
I was hoping the linked-to pictures would be, I dunnow, big or something.


Yeah . . . something's obviously wrong . . .

PetrolTed

34,425 posts

303 months

Tuesday 27th June 2006
quotequote all
jhough said:
I was hoping the linked-to pictures would be, I dunnow, big or something.


Sorry. We'll get that sorted.

lap_time

339 posts

227 months

Wednesday 28th June 2006
quotequote all
Must say I'd rather a DB9 Sportmodificato (see evo 089)

v12Aston

193 posts

235 months

Wednesday 28th June 2006
quotequote all

But that was just cosmetic changes. Also, I am just guessing that it was a little over the cost of the Sports Pack

dinkel

26,932 posts

258 months

Wednesday 28th June 2006
quotequote all
v12Aston said:

. . . just cosmetic changes.


They say so .

"Upto the time of writing, the chassis and engine have been untouched although the owner would like the engine worked on by Aston Martin Racing. But also they are unable to work on road Astons, . . ."

lap_time

339 posts

227 months

Thursday 29th June 2006
quotequote all
v12Aston said:

But that was just cosmetic changes. Also, I am just guessing that it was a little over the cost of the Sports Pack


...well it did have a Vanquish S exhaust...

:J:

2,593 posts

225 months

Thursday 29th June 2006
quotequote all
lap_time said:
v12Aston said:

But that was just cosmetic changes. Also, I am just guessing that it was a little over the cost of the Sports Pack


...well it did have a Vanquish S exhaust...


Vanquish tailpipes.

FourWheelDrift

88,483 posts

284 months

Friday 30th June 2006
quotequote all
lap_time said:
Must say I'd rather a DB9 Sportmodificato (see evo 089)


Or you could go bling with the DB9 Mansory.

www.astonmartins.com/gaydon_vh/db9_mansory.htm
www.mansory.com/



...........ok maybe not