Evo India

BENTLEY CONTINENTA­L GT

Fresh out of the box, Bentley’s all-new Continenta­l GT has cruised past its rivals to become the best GT on sale. Here’s why

- WORDS by STEVE SUTCLIFFE PHOTOGRAPH­Y by ASTON PARROTT

SO THERE WAS THIS PUB I USED TO frequent – whenever I had an interestin­g car on test, basically – and it was run by a delightful old bloke called Derek Bovet-White, who used to fly Hurricanes during the Second World War. He was a complete car nut. He had a V12 XJS with a manual gearbox and a silly exhaust, and an XK150S among other toys, and all sorts of people who were into cars would turn up at his pub for a natter – about anything, really, but mostly about the burning of petrol.

One day, one of Derek’s oldest mates was due to arrive in what Derek claimed was ‘the most beautiful car in the world’. ‘You wait, you’ll see…’ said Derek.

And when this chap eventually rolled up later that afternoon, the entire pub went out to see what he was driving – an early 1950s Bentley Continenta­l, whose pristine, dark blue bodywork had been hand-made by HJ Mulliner. Sparkling in the sun that day as we all chatted, it was indeed one of the most beautiful cars I’d ever seen, or have ever seen since.

Which explains, to some extent perhaps, why I was so disappoint­ed by the reinvented Bentley Continenta­l GT when it first appeared in 2003. This was the first car to come out of Bentley since VW took charge, and although it had all the right on-paper credential­s to blow the rest of the GT-car world away, in reality it was a bit of a blunderbus­s. It was heavy, clumsy to drive and, to my eyes, not especially beautiful, and I never quite connected with it as a result.

Scroll forwards 14 years to the present day, however, and we

have a brand new Bentley Continenta­l GT, and not only does it look about ten times lovelier than the car it replaces but it drives rather beautifull­y as well. If anything, in fact, it drives even better than it looks, and there is one very obvious reason why.

Crucially, and unlike the previous Continenta­l GT, the new car is based not on the underpinni­ngs of a humble Volkswagen but those of a Porsche – specifical­ly those of the excellent Panamera. And unlike last time, when Bentley’s engineers were effectivel­y given hand-me-down parts and told to do whatever they could with them to turn a Phaeton into a Continenta­l, this time they were involved in the car’s creation right from the word go.

It’s now over five years since they first sat down with their counterpar­ts from Weissach and started work on the new car, and this time they were able to build the car, literally, from the ground up , shaping its hardware the way they wanted.

The result is a GT of quite astounding all-round capabiliti­es. On the one hand the new Bentley is notably more comfortabl­e and refined than the last one, with a sense of genuine majesty to the way it flows across the terrain, as if it were some kind of mobilised gentlemen’s club. You almost feel like lighting a cigar when you’re driving it, so soothing is the ride, so serene is the car’s gait, even when the road surface is far from perfect.

And the interior merely adds to the overall effect. It’s a place of rare quality, and of exquisite design and craftsmans­hip. This car might cost the very thick end of four crore but, inside, it feels more like a ten crore luxury yacht. Yet at the same time there is every conceivabl­e piece of contempora­ry technology you could ever wish for, all of it integrated into a cabin that looks, feels and even smells like an impossibly expensive hotel room. True, space in the back seats isn’t great but, well, do you really care about what those in the back think when you’re at the wheel of a Continenta­l GT?

There’s another side to the new GT, though, one that will take you completely by surprise, and that’s how tidy it is when you reach for the button marked Sport and decide to drive it with a bit more gusto. In the old car you’d do so for perhaps two minutes and then think better of it, because there wasn’t much point in driving it hard – for the simple reason that there wasn’t much fun to be had while doing so. The level of control simply wasn’t there in relation to the car’s weight.

In the new GT, however, it is extraordin­ary how much poise

A FANTASTIC HIT OF POWER OVERSTEER IS A RATHER WONDERFUL THING TO EXPERIENCE IN A BENTLEY CONTINENTA­L GT

there is when you start to fling the car around. The fact that it weighs only 76kg less than before – meaning it still strains the scales at well over two tons – must be largely ignored, because the computer-controlled air suspension does a quite phenomenal job of controllin­g the car’s mass.

In addition, Bentley has configured the four-wheel-drive system to allow much more torque to flow to the rear axle this time; in Sport mode, in fact, just 17 per cent of the power and torque goes to the front. So if you then switch the stability control system off and bury the throttle out of a corner, you will, and do, get a quite fantastic hit of power oversteer. Which is a rather wonderful thing to experience in a Bentley Continenta­l GT, for all sorts of reasons.

And last but by no means least, it’s also quick, the new GT. As in teeth-clenchingl­y so. The 6-litre twin-turbo W12 is an all-new motor, even to the point that it has a different firing order to make it smoother but also sportier in tone than the old one. But the fact that it develops 626bhp, and a whopping 900Nm between 1350 and 4500rpm, is arguably what matters most – because this is sufficient energy to send the GT to 100kmph in 3.7sec and on to a top speed of 333kmph. And once again this is a faintly hilarious thing to experience in a car that weighs 2169kg and wears a Bentley badge on its nose.

At last, it seems, the Bentley Continenta­l has been properly replaced. By a car that will, at times, take your breath away. Just like the one from the 1950s did, back in the day.

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 ??  ?? Right: New GT shares its underpinni­ngs with Porsche’s Panamera – and it shows, especially on track. Below right: Cabin’s blend of traditiona­l
Brit craftsmans­hip and modern touchscree­n tech
is beautifull­y done
Right: New GT shares its underpinni­ngs with Porsche’s Panamera – and it shows, especially on track. Below right: Cabin’s blend of traditiona­l Brit craftsmans­hip and modern touchscree­n tech is beautifull­y done
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