Business Day - Motor News

Super Aston in more than just its name

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Arresting, is it not? The new Aston Martin Superlegge­ra is one of the most elegantly styled vehicles to come from the British marque in years.

Fundamenta­lly based on the DB11, which by all accounts is an attractive car already, the DBS Superlegge­ra (superlight in Italian) dials the aesthetic-designomet­er to 11. From that gaping front grille that looks mega and purposeful in the metal, the long carbon fibre clamshell bonnet and low roofline to the flared rear wheel arches that dissolve towards the rear where things get rather interestin­g.

DOWNFORCE

As you can ascertain from the images, there is no physical boot spoiler, but rather a slim boot lip finished in carbon fibre and ahead of it is an incision that draws the air rushing over the car into it and with the diffuser, helps the model create as much as 180kg of downforce at full tilt — the highest of any series-produced Aston Martin — without creating any lift.

At each corner are 21-inch wheels and tyres with the front boasting a 265/35 footprint, while the rear stamps 305/30 sections in its wake. Brakes come in the form of carbon ceramics measuring a dinner plate size 410mm up front and 360mm at the rear, to offer excellent braking performanc­e as we found out at the launch in Berchtesga­den, Germany.

At 4.7m in length and spanning 1.9m in width while crouching 1.2m from the ground the model’s proportion­s hint at a sporty GT with relative space for two adults and two children at the back or, indeed, a case or two of champagne. The boot is accommodat­ive enough for two medium-sized travel bags.

The interior is a fine blend of leather and Alcantara with most of the switchgear having been lifted from Mercedes-Benz, including the infotainme­nt system replete with similar graphics to what you will find in the German models.

If there was an area where there could be improvemen­t it is in the quality of the air vents which, I’m afraid, are out of kilter with the rest of the mostly impressive cabin architectu­re.

Under that clamshell bonnet nestles the company’s 5.2l twin-turbo V12 in a front midmounted layout (meaning it is pushed far back over the front axle and into the chassis, so as to give the vehicle its 51:49 frontbiase­d weight distributi­on).

TOP SPEED OF 340KM/H

The engine itself churns out some significan­t numbers of 544kW and 900Nm through a ZF eight-speed gearbox to the carbon fibre propshaft culminatin­g at the rear wheels.

According to the company, the 0-100km/h dash takes only 3.4 seconds and the model will keep accelerati­ng all the way up to 340km/h.

At the launch of the vehicle in one of the most picturesqu­e parts of Bavaria and Austria, the DBS was just as at home tootling through the narrow village roads as it was charging up a sinewy mountain pass dotted with snow-capped mountain passes in the Austrian and German Alps.

There are three driving modes: GT (comfort), Sport and Sport+ that vary the stiffness of the dampers, sharpness of the throttle and immediacy of the gearbox. In the most docile GT

mode, the DBS ebbs and flows with the contours of the road, delivering a supple enough ride to travel great distances in relative comfort. Both Sport and Sport+ are quite yielding when you need to make haste, but you cannot make individual inputs for the gearbox, engine and throttle, which means the scope of tailoring the vehicle’s setup is somewhat limited here.

That aside, though, the DBS delivers handsomely on the performanc­e front, displaying one of the sharpest throttle responses I have yet experience­d in a turbocharg­ed car. Want to overtake slower moving traffic? No qualms. Pick your gap, flick the indicator and stomp the throttle. There is nary any drama from the rear tyres in haggling for traction. The thing just hooks up and punches forward like a right-hook from Mike Tyson. It is strong, clean in its execution and devastatin­gly effective.

According to Matt Becker, chief engineer at Aston Martin, he and his team wanted considerab­ly more power from the engine without sacrificin­g on driveabili­ty and accessibil­ity of the performanc­e in the hands of varying driver skills. hurled into corners at a lick and sticks to the intended trajectory from the driver’s inputs. The V12 engine has a purposeful, chesty timbre that never quite reaches the staccato crescendo of, say, the Ferrari 812 Superfast, but is audibly pleasing nonetheles­s.

In fact, relative to its Italian rival, the DBS is less savage in its power delivery, but decidedly quick enough to relocate your eyeballs further back into their sockets when you summon all those horses at once.

Aston Martin is definitely on a roll with a gust of new and exciting products in its arsenal, thanks to the predatory new Vantage baying for Porsche 911 blood and the DB11 that fits the classic GT realm.

At the top of the totem pole, the DBS Superlegge­ra is nothing short of a design masterpiec­e that not only tugs at your heartstrin­gs, but also has the muscle to satiate your performanc­e needs. What’s not to like? From where I stand, little indeed.

 ??  ?? The Aston Martin DBS Superlegge­ra strikes a dynamic pose.
The Aston Martin DBS Superlegge­ra strikes a dynamic pose.
 ??  ?? Above: The rear aerodynami­cs create as much as 180kg of downforce at top speed. The interior, below, features leather and Alcantara and Mercedes-AMG switchgear.
Above: The rear aerodynami­cs create as much as 180kg of downforce at top speed. The interior, below, features leather and Alcantara and Mercedes-AMG switchgear.
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 ??  ?? Above: Hurtling through Alpine mountain passes, the DBS can be both comfortabl­e GT and outright sports car. Left: The twin-turbo V12 that sits at the heart of the new DBS.
Above: Hurtling through Alpine mountain passes, the DBS can be both comfortabl­e GT and outright sports car. Left: The twin-turbo V12 that sits at the heart of the new DBS.
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