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| Aston Martin V8
Vantage
(1993 - 1999) |
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A whole four years was to pass between the introduction of the Virage and the high performance
Vantage. If the 6.3 conversion was a big jump from the standard car, the Vantage became a giant leap.
Only the roof and the doors were carried over after the stylists John Heffernan and Ken Greenley
together with Project Manager, Mike Booth, substantially reworked the original
Virage. Even the Virage name was dropped from the car leaving only the name Vantage
- never to be confused with the early 70's 6 cylinder car of course. Later variants were
badged V8 Vantage which is even more confusing as then should not be confused
with the first production V8 Vantage built between 1977 and 1989 or the current
Gaydon produced car. Sometimes people also refer to this car as the Vantage S/C, V550 to reflect peak
power or also, confusingly sometime
V590, which refers to the engine prefix which also allows a distinction from the later V600.
Also although many UK cars have Virage Vantage on their V5 document, this term should
never be used. |
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The front view of the Vantage reveals no fewer than six headlights. This trend for excess in the lighting dept was started with the DBS packing four. The Bulldog had five, centrally mounted, whereas the
facelift V8 Lagonda was the first to have six. The earlier cars
had square headlights (similar to the V8 Zagato) whereas from chassis 70113 they were replaced with round
projector type also used on all examples of the V8 coupe and long chassis V8
Volante. I believe since the square ones are now virtually unobtainable, if cars
receive frontal damage affecting the headlamps, they tend to be rebuilt with the
later round lights. Those wonderfully juicy grapefruit rear lights were specially designed and tooled for the car. It would have been better if the lights also incorporated a rear reflector instead if it being separate in the bumper, but this would have been too expensive
for such a low volume car.
Changes to the Virage based body may be extensive, but that's nothing compared to the engine. Here we have a 5340cc V8 with not one but twin
Eaton superchargers. With 550bhp and 550 lb.ft of torque, this
was, at the time, the most powerful production powerplant in the world. In V600
form, as unveiled late in 1998, and additional 50bhp became available. With all this power, you now want to know "how fast".
Is 186 mph and 0-60 mph in 4.6 seconds enough? - well these are AML's 'official'
figures, although in testing, I believe a figure of almost 200mph was recorded.
In its day, it was the the fastest Aston Martin road car ever. I was very fortunate to ride in
a works
Vantage in 1998, easily the fastest car I have ever been a passenger - including a
Dodge Viper. |
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The massive 362 mm diameter ventilated discs and four piston AP Racing
callipers fitted to the front of the Vantage were at the time, the largest fitted to a road car. They have their work cut out stopping car weighing
in at 1990 kg.
The sumptuous yet functional interior of a Vantage, was much improved
from the Virage including the replacement of the VIC computer with
three, then four analogue dials. The keen eyed amongst you will see
that the car illustrated below is an automatic. The factory only built
the car with a six speed manual box, the small number of automatics
have often been converted at Works Service. |
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Cars from 70173 (plus 71) lost the Citroen CX
sourced door mirrors and gained a newer Jaguar version; these cars also had
a greatly revised exhaust system with transverse rear silencers. Cars with
chassis number 70198 and above (inc 70194 received the flush Mondeo sourced
door handles with integral keyholes, and an improved cooling system
By February 1998, production had topped the 200 mark during five years of
production and by the time production ended, a mere 239 'standard' examples had been
produced - a very exclusive motorcar indeed. The remaining 40 supercharged Vantage
coupes built during 1999 and
2000 were the Le Mans special editions. Once production of the V8 ended in late
2000, the days of heavyweight coachbuilt Astons were over for good. |
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DP2055 V8 Vantage prototype |
V8 Vantage
V600
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