The expansion of the Aston Martin range continues apace. The DB12, Vantage and DBX now all have their ‘S’ derivatives, bringing a little more spice to the design and the driving experience. Which means there’s only one model left to potentially benefit from a leaner, meaner special edition: the Vanquish.
It could be spectacular, because the V12 flagship is the best car that Aston Martin makes. Maybe the best it ever has, in fact: monumentally fast, epically capable, hugely entertaining and massively desirable, it’s everything and more you’d hope for from the ultimate series production Aston. Anything beyond what the standard car offers, be that an S or a related badge, has every right to be astonishing. And a great foil to the Bentley Supersports…
The extra power and panache of the range-topping Aston Martin has come at a cost, however: the Vanquish costs from £330,000. You can bet that £400,000 is very easily achieved with options, especially if Q is involved. Those in the classifieds are from £350,000 and, well, that’s patently a huge amount of money. It’s certainly enough to be wondering what the next best thing might cost and, wouldn’t you know, the old DBS Superleggeras are beginning to hover around £100,000…
Be in no doubt, the Vanquish is the superior car. It’s even faster, even better to drive, and boasts an interior from another planet compared to the DBS. But the Superleggera was a damn fine car in its own right; there was some concern about how it might cope with twin-turbocharged V12 torque (and 725hp), given the previous Vanquish - fun though it was - didn’t boast brilliant traction. We needn’t have worried: seldom has 664lb ft felt like just the right amount of pulling power. The DBS was as assured and accessible as a modern super GT needs to be, with the wild side most definitely retained. Plus it was utterly stunning to behold; you wouldn’t be alone in thinking the Superleggera was a more arresting design than the new Vanquish.
Time waits for no man, however, and no Aston Martin; with the earliest DBSes now seven years old, a reasonable amount having been made and a replacement now out there, they are more affordable than they used to be. The original RRP was £225,000, meaning most would have been comfortably beyond a quarter of a million once they left the showroom. You can bet some would have been even closer to £300,000.
Full disclosure: this one isn’t a third as much as a new Vanquish. If we assume that figure is £350,000, that means £116k - just like this one. But with just about every DBS out there in grey, black or white, and almost always with black wheels, some colour looked too good to ignore; sombre really didn’t do the looks justice. This is much more like it, to our eyes at least, a beautiful blue (help us out, Aston people) really bringing it to life. Maybe the wheels aren’t the sexiest ever; silver rather than black is the important thing here.
It’s a 2019 car with just 20,000 miles, for sale approved used at Aston Martin Nottingham for £128,000. Or not very much more than a 911 Carrera with the right options comes out at these days. Of course this won’t be the end of a Superleggera’s depreciation journey, though it’s surely going to be less severe from now on - the Vanquish before this is currently from about £70,000 secondhand. The DBS was a significant step on from that, too; there’s no reason why good ones shouldn’t remain desirable for a very long time yet. Or at least until those epic Vanquishes come down quite a bit more…
SPECIFICATION | ASTON MARTIN DBS SUPERLEGGERA
Engine: 5,204cc V12, turbocharged
Transmission: 8-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 725@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 664@1,500-5,000rpm
0-62mph: 3.4 seconds
Top speed: 211mph
MPG: 23.0
CO2: 285g/km
Year registered: 2019
Recorded mileage: 20,539
Price new: £225,000 (before options)
Yours for: £128,000
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