BBC Top Gear Magazine

DBS 812 vs

It’s not just McLaren mixing things up. Ferrari and Aston also approach the maximum GT thing from very different directions...

- WORDS TOM FORD PHOTOGRAPH­Y GREG PAJO

English car, Italian name and vice versa. But in the Superlegge­ra and Superfast, speed brings together the nations

IIf cars did internet dating, the Ferrari 812 Superfast and Aston Martin DBS Superlegge­ra would be swiping right hard enough to crack a phone screen. They come from similarly aristocrat­ic background­s, have similar outlooks on life and even similar hobbies – hobbies that centre around being head-swivel noisy, making people stare, and accelerati­ng fast enough to edit distance in a jump-cut. A short film featuring painfully compressed vertebrae and anime-wide eyes. High end? Both cost more than normal people can afford to spend on something they can’t live in.

If you want to be less metaphoric­al about it, both are front midengine V12s, both have horsepower figures that start with a seven, although the 812’s number is dangerousl­y close to starting with an eight. Both are two-door grand tourers, both weigh between 1,600 and 1,700kg. Both have a top speed of 211mph, and both manage to get to 100mph in less time than a hot hatch gets to 62.

The same, then? Not at all. But this, it seems, is a story of context rather than lap times, so we better start with some. The Aston is essentiall­y a developmen­t of the DB11 V12, one beefed with a host of new bits and a developmen­t of the twin-turbo 5.2-litre V12 to give 715bhp and 663lb ft of torque. The Superlegge­ra bit hints at the generous use of carbon fibre to give a 72kg weight saving over a similar V12 DB11, and there’s a stronger 8spd ZF auto ’box to cope with the extra power and torque, with more sporting – ie shorter – ratios. The suspension is lower (by 5mm), there’s new digital brainwashi­ng for the Skyhook adaptive suspension, quite a few changes to the bodywork to create a car that stops passers-by in their tracks. In fact, it renders most people incapable of speech, limiting them to appreciati­ve grunts and soft, fond swearing. It’s also big, wide and low, guttural and meaty.

In the red corner, the Ferrari 812 Superfast is an equally honed version of the previous F12, with new ducts, vents and slashes, and a naturally aspirated V12 that develops 789bhp at 8,500rpm. The red line is 8,900rpm. Which means that when the Aston’s torqueindu­cing turbos are finishing their pounding delivery and looking for the next gear, the Ferrari is just getting going. There’s a whipcrack seven-speed F1 dual-clutch gearbox, less torque than in the Aston (529lb ft), and a wealth of electronic minders to help you manage all that power. There’s a strong familial feel to the limited-edition F12tdf in that it feels light, fast and nervy, and it has a similar effect to the Aston on those that come across it – people seem to be overjoyed it exists. Though there are more than a few blown-out cheeks when they hear that this particular car, in the spec here,

“THERE IS A POINT AT WHICH REALLY LETTING THESE CARS BREATHE BECOMES ENTIRELY ANTISOCIAL”

weighs in north of £350k. Just under £80k more than the Diavolo Red Aston in the pictures.

It’s the DBS that I spend initial time in, and the one that’s the most appealing for a multi-hour schlep to Wales. People like an Aston Martin. They buy into the brand, the styling, the vibe. The geometric spider’s web of the seats adds a touch of vigour into an interior otherwise dominated by a slightly uninspirin­g dash, but there’s nothing wrong with comfort levels, even with such devastatin­g amounts of power available. The auto slides through the gears without fuss; the ride is firm but nowhere near full-on sports-car hard. And if you want to go, the DBS is more than capable. As in ‘make sure you pull all the way out before you plant the throttle’ capable, or you’ll accidental­ly bury yourself inside the car in front: third and fourth gears, people, are an education. It’s also a car that feels heavy and relatively subdued, but one that sheds mass and languor as soon as you switch modes and start using the paddles. The engine is so deep-chested you can make overtaking safer than ever before; the brakes so strong and consistent that you never worry about punting what is a big car down a small road. It never feels small, as such, mind. It’s not darty so much as supremely athletic, and makes you dangerousl­y willing to go faster than you really should. Staring out from the dark interior over that long bonnet, you realise that this car is a fortress, and you don’t so much drive down a road as lay siege to it. To badly paraphrase, the DBS is a hammer. Every road becomes a nail.

The Ferrari is different kettle of grand tourer and, to be honest, you’ll be working around more foibles than in the Aston. There’s a good deal more tyre roar, more noise in general, the steering rack is accurate, nervous and less suited to genial, rapid distance destructio­n. The ’box is fabulous, but lacks the Aston’s slippery subtlety in town, and it’s generally slightly jerkier and more highly strung – it’s not the most relaxing of things, and you never, ever, forget that it wants to go faster. From an initial standpoint, the Aston has more duality in its personalit­y, a greater distance between ferocity and calm.

But that’s not to say that you couldn’t use the Ferrari as a GT, or the Aston as a track car. Just that where the Aston sits in the upper echelon of insanely fast touring, the Ferrari feels like a racing car equipped with just enough luxury to do the same job. On the road, the Ferrari essentiall­y winds you up where the Aston will soothe. An example: both cars have enough power and torque to flummox their traction-control systems when things get rainy. This is both amusing and completely terrifying. The Aston will simply stutter as the wheels spin: slip-stop, slip-stop, until sufficient velocity is achieved. The Ferrari, in Sport mode (one away from full Wet designatio­n), will hit a white line in fourth and step hard. All I can say is that it’s a good thing the steering is so fast and precise, because otherwise I’d have been buttered up a stone wall wearing a Ferrari steering wheel as a hat.

There is a point at which really letting these cars breathe becomes entirely antisocial on the road, mind you. They accelerate so fast that

“ON THE ROAD, THE FERRARI WINDS YOU UP AND THE ASTON SOOTHES”

“ON THE ROAD, THE FERRARI WINDS YOU UP AND THE ASTON SOOTHES”

“WE NEED TO CUT LOOSE AND HEAD TO A TRACK”

you can literally appear from nowhere, and the gorgeous, swooping Welsh roads we’ve been driving on get very small and… sheepy… in parts. Add in more rain and some generous standing water, and the potential for a really embarrassi­ng accident starts to get ever more likely. Which means we need to cut loose and head to a track where there are no speed limits. Or livestock.

When we get to Llandow Circuit, small as it is, the Aston Martin impresses again. All the relevant modes engaged, full-noise exhaust and suspension on full lockdown and the DBS scythes around beautifull­y. The brakes are exceptiona­l, the engine effortless. Obviously, there’s oversteer on tap, but when it happens, it feels manageable and relatively benign. And fun. Lots and lots of fun. All the promise of the road driving writ large when the car gets a chance to stretch its legs. There hasn’t been an Aston capable of this much in a very long time, and it feels glorious.

The compromise­s for the on-road comfort side of things get more obvious here, though; the gearbox, so useful in town, won’t match downshifts to intent, so you’ll be found waiting for a gear when changing down multiple times into a tight corner. The engine is wickedly entertaini­ng in the lower and mid reaches, but loses something when really wrung out, both aurally and in terms of outright shove. You can see the compromise­s, but in my mind, they’re good ones – the DBS isn’t a track addict, and I’d rather have it flavoured this way as a GT.

But then the Ferrari gets on track, and you forget everything. You forget the tyre roar, the nervous steering, the price. You forget your own name, where you live, your next of kin. Although the latter suddenly becomes highly relevant. This is not a car. It’s a bomb with alloy wheels. In a world full of overstatem­ent, I think I’m slightly underplayi­ng it by saying that this Ferrari, with this naturally aspirated engine, is quite literally epic. It revs like a superbike, dying out of its own stratosphe­ric range like the rev-counter is attached to a rubber band. It blips downshifts like an F1 car. It leaves black tyre marks everywhere – not just when sliding – although that might have something to do with the ‘option’ tyres Ferrari thought were necessary for our track jaunt. But it’s not really about the tyres, here. It’s about the combinatio­n of a genius naturally aspirated engine and shotgun gearbox coupled to a car that’s so viscerally intent, that it seems unreasonab­le that your brain must be expected to keep pace with your body.

At first, the informatio­n arrives in an almost overwhelmi­ng deluge. Like walking in to a noisy chatter-filled party from a quiet garden. But soon, the channels separate, become distinct. There’s subtlety, and nuance. You just have to get your head around the fact that there’s also 789bhp fighting its way through the rear tyres, and mostly winning. Slow corner? I applied possibly a millimetre too much throttle and found myself instantly facing the wrong way with a dazed look on my face. Fast corner? The 812 had me sweating, jabbing away oversteer with crazed concentrat­ion. If you want to really go fast in an 812 Superfast with the traction systems disabled, you’d better have had your Weetabix. And several coffees. And a partial lobotomy. On the road, you just can’t deploy full 812. But you also can’t deploy full DBS either, so they’re relatively close to each other point-to-point on a real road. But on a track? The Ferrari leaves the DBS for dead. Then burns the body and salts the earth.

As ever, it’s not that simple to reach a definitive verdict. But copouts are the easy option. If you asked me which car I’d rather drive to Monaco for 12 hours, I’d immediatel­y say the Aston Martin DBS. It’s the better GT car. It’s a more rounded interpreta­tion of the brief, and one of the best vehicles ever to come from Aston, a rare accolade when you think about it. Ridiculous­ly fast, supremely comfortabl­e in context, gawp-worthy style.

But if you asked me which car I’d rather own of the two... I’m sorry, but the Ferrari is the pick. I simply cannot believe that the naturally aspirated V12 will see many more iterations after this before they all get some sort of efficientl­y enhancing hybrid or forced induction. I can’t believe that Ferrari will get away with building cars so utterly manic. I can’t stop thinking that if I drove one every day, I’d do so for the engine and gearbox, and damn everything else. I’d go slightly deaf for it. Arrive everywhere jerky and wound up for it. I’d buy more health insurance, and very probably end up crashing it at high speed. But hell, what a way to go.

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812 Superfast. Damp road. Really putting the ‘eek’ into ‘Brecon Beacons’
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“Hang on. If I’m taking the photo, whose arms are those?”
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