BBC Top Gear Magazine

ASTON V12 VANTAGE S

Flawed but brilliant. Aston goes back to basics

- BY OLLIE MARRIAGE

It has become fashionabl­e to kick Astons for being behind the times, for failing to keep up with the pace of change. But as they slip further away from the advancing tech of Porsche and Ferrari, so they seem to cleave themselves a clearer, more defned role as a gentleman’s feelgood sports car.

Because if there’s one thing this new V12 Vantage S Roadster does well, it’s making its driver feel good. This is a lovely, lovely car in so many ways and an irritating one in just one. Let’s deal with that frst. The 7spd sequential manual ’box isn’t good enough. It’s too slow, too jarring and ruins the smoothness the rest of the car strives so hard to attain. It’s better in manual mode, provided you lift the throttle while pulling one of the carbon-fbre paddles (an iniquitous £1,995 option), but you still fnd yourself driving round the issues.

But when an engine develops 375lb ft of torque at just 1,000rpm, you don’t need to change gear too often. This uprated 6.0-litre V12 is something of a masterpiec­e. It doesn’t quite have the trumpety blare of a Ferrari V12, but it’s richer-toned and delivers colossal performanc­e in a very appealing, measured way.

It’s honeyed and sultry at the low end, sweeping efortlessl­y through the mid-range to a majestic fnale. Followed by a pause while it takes a gear-breath ready for the next onslaught. It’s shockingly fast in that it never appears to have to work that hard to heap speed upon speed, the 565bhp/457lb ft outputs being an easy match for the 1,745kg kerbweight.

It’s not as sharp as a Porsche or a Ferrari, but that’s not the Vantage S’s personalit­y. As ever, the engine dictates the character, and this Aston likes a fast sweeper, allowing the surfeit of power to tax the capable chassis. It’s fun to drive, with clear lines of communicat­ion and little complicati­on. Yes, the frame does hum with the occasional vibration, the roof mechanism is very slow and the Roadster is not as handsome and well proportion­ed as the V12 Vantage S coupe launched last year, but I had one of my most pleasant drives of the year in this car, simply heading home from work, roof down, cabin remarkably turbulence-free and B&O stereo (a £5,495 option) pumping out the tunes. Simple car, simple pleasures.

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 ??  ?? 375lb ft of torque at 1,000rpm means little need to change gear...
375lb ft of torque at 1,000rpm means little need to change gear...
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