Las Vegas Review-Journal

Aston Martin produces a beauty again

Performanc­e, looks combine with DB12

- By Larry Printz

Romance is dead. The idea of refined, beautiful things is a notion that has been replaced by a post-industrial aesthetic that has utterly ruined product design.

So, it’s no wonder that sports car maker Aston Martin, and its adherence to traditiona­l sports cars values, remains so beloved worldwide.

That’s what makes the 2024 Aston Martin DB12 one of the world’s great sports cars.

But Aston Martin would prefer you call it a super tourer, and while you might think this is merely an exercise in semantics, they’re not wrong.

If the DB12 looks familiar, it should. It comes from a long line of Aston Martin DB sports cars, a series that dates to the 1948 Aston Martin 2-liter Sports, now known as the DB1. For 2024, the 75th anniversar­y of the

DB1, the DB12 arrives looking much like its predecesso­r, the DB11. And indeed, it does wear the DB11’S doors and borrows the DBS’ roof. But look closely and you’ll see changes. The DB12’S front end is higher than before and sports a larger grille. The headlamps have been redesigned, as has the front splitter and side mirrors. But those changes are subtle enough that you can be forgiven for not noticing.

Its panels cloak the same bonded and riveted aluminum architectu­re as before, but Aston Martin has gone to work to make it 7 percent stiffer than before. Its track is now 0.2 inches wider up front and 0.9 inches wider in the rear. The automaker has also tended to its suspension, which is all-new and features the latest adaptive dampers, electronic power assisted steering and an electronic rear differenti­al — and the results are impressive.

You might be expecting to find a V-12, but you would be wrong. Worldwide government dictates have consigned this power plant to history. In its place is a Aston-martin-revised Mercedes-amg, twin-turbocharg­ed 4.0, V-8 engine that produces 671 horsepower and 590 pound-feet of torque. That’s an increase of 34 percent from the DB11. All that power flows to the rear wheels through an eight-speed ZF gearbox. That’s good enough to run 0-60 mph in 3.5 seconds on its way to a 202-mph top speed. The driveline includes five driving modes: GT, Sport, Sport+, Individual, and, for the first time, Wet.

Hop in the car and you’ll find much the DB11’S perfect driving position remains intact. And yeah, you could grouse against the miniscule trunk. But this is a sports car – um – make that super tourer. If you need more space, pack lighter or look elsewhere.

But there’s much to like about the center stack, which has been reworked from the DB11. Gone are the round push-buttons for the transmissi­on atop the center of the instrument panel. Instead, a toggle shifter is standard, much like those used on other European cars. Particular­ly welcome is the revised 10.25-inch infotainme­nt touch-screen, as Aston Martin finally replaces the old Mercedes-benz COMAND system it has been using for years. It comes with a standard Bowers & Wilkins audio system. It resides alongside a 10.25inch digital instrument cluster.

We had a chance to sample the 2024 Aston Martin DB12 for the first time at The Concours Club, an automotive country club near Miami in the Miami-opa Locka Executive Airport. It proved the perfect place to try out Aston’s newest speed machine, as it features a driving circuit more than 2 miles long.

The DB11 is certainly a grand touring car rather than a sports car. In other words, while it could go fast, comfort was nearly as important as velocity. It’s not that the DB12 can’t play that part. It can, beautifull­y. But far more importantl­y, switching it into Sport+ mode reveals the DB12 to also be every bit the hyper car you want to track.

Hammering the throttle down The Concours Club’s 2,100-foot straightaw­ay, the Aston Martin’s howls with a knowing menace well into triple-digit speed. The steering is linear, quick and direct, and the car carves through corners without a trace of wallow, eager to follow the driver’s orders. Drifting? It’s a snap, as this car easily rotates around bends exactly

as you like. It’s very easy to maintain control, and it’s clearly communicat­ive.

It possesses a lively burliness and intensity missing from the DB11, making the term super tourer more than justified. And much like Superman becomes Clark Kent, so too does the DB12 revert to being just another good-looking, nattily-dressed supermodel once off the track. It stakes out the space between hard-core sports cars like the Ferrari Roma and Porsche 911 Turbo, and grand tourers like the Bentley Continenta­l GT.

And that makes the perfect propositio­n in a high-dollar sporting driving machine.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? The Aston-martin-revised Mercedes-amg, twin-turbocharg­ed 4.0 V-8 produces 671 horsepower and 590 pound-feet of torque.
Tribune News Service The Aston-martin-revised Mercedes-amg, twin-turbocharg­ed 4.0 V-8 produces 671 horsepower and 590 pound-feet of torque.

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