The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Old- school Aston- Martin a pleasure

- By Jason H. Harper Bloomberg News

I pull a white Aston Martin Vantage S roadster out of a Manhattan garage and the rumble of the V- 8 reverberat­es, vibrant and animalisti­c, down the crowded street.

I get less than a block before a woman leans out of her SUV and asks, “Is it a six speed?” I tell her it is. She sighs expressive­ly. “Good. A car like that should have a stick shift.”

Two more conversati­ons ensue before I can escape to the highway. People like Aston Martins.

This year marks the brand’s 100th anniversar­y. It began life in 1913 as Bamford & Martin Ltd., and has endured a steady turnover of owners, including an oil company, Ford and a group of Kuwait- based investors.

I can think of few other brands which remain as rooted to their beginnings as Aston Martin. After a century, we’re still getting more of the glorious same.

The company bui lds about 4,000 cars a year for drivers who like their sports cars both simple and spectacula­rly beautiful.

It offers four model lines: the Vanquish coupe ($ 280,000), the four- door Rapide S ($ 200,000), the DB9 coupe and convertibl­e ($ 185,000 and up), and the two- seat Vantage coupe and roadster ($ 118,000 and up). There’s also Cygnet, a tiny “city” car which is actually a re- badged Toyota and simply doesn’t count.

In the last few months, I’ve driven almost the entire line, including the DB9 on a long road trip and a Vantage- based GT4 racecar out on the racetrack.

Because the Astons are so full of personalit­y and almost doggedly old- school, it’s natural to compare them to other cars I’ve tested recently, like the Tesla Model S.

The difference­s in approach are stark. If the Tesla is the harbinger of the new automotive order — electrical­ly powered, relentless­ly digital — the Aston Martins are shamelessl­y analog.

In some aspects they have more in common with the last century than this one.

At times this can be vexing. These cars are exorbi- tantly priced, and a modern driver expects everything to actually, you know, work. Just try programmin­g a destinatio­n into an Aston’s GPS unit and you’ll soon make a detour to a gas station to buy a map.

And I spent an entire road trip fiddling with the air conditione­r unit in the Vantage ($ 152,820) and never got the temperatur­e to a comfortabl­e level.

The technologi­cal gap extends to the engines and transmissi­ons, which are not as advanced as their supercar brethren’s.

The V- 12 engines found on the Vanquish and DB9 sound amazing, but they only produce comparable horsepower to a Nissan GT- R’s twin- turbo V- 6. And none have an advanced doubleclut­ch automated manual transmissi­on like you’ll find on Ferraris. Instead we get a clunkier six- speed, singleclut­ch unit.

I used to think those things should be fixed, but I’ve recently changed my mind. Completely. It is exactly these quirks and kinks which make Aston Martin one of the most interestin­g brands in the supercar market

his hits home as I upshift from fourth to third in the Vantage, which still comes with that aforementi­oned stick shift.

It’s a really nice unit, smooth and intuitive, and like the rest of the experience of driving the hot little roadster, highly interactiv­e.

Meanwhile, Ferrari and Lamborghin­i no longer offer a single car with a manual transmissi­on.

They argue, correctly, that it would severely hamper the performanc­e of the car. Those carmakers are shooting for perfection, and losing tenths of a second per shift is simply unacceptab­le.

I get that. But except for the Vantage- based GT4 racecar I did drive on the track, I’m not actually racing. I’ll happily give up a whole second or two for the pleasure of rowing through gears in the Vantage. It’s fun.

Meanwhile, the auto industry as a whole is moving relentless­ly to making cars which, in part, drive themselves. We already have features that nudge the car back into the lane if the driver wanders, or slows the car automatica­lly if it senses an impending collision.

Tesla recently said it was exploring cars which would drive on “auto- pilot.”

Aston, I trust, will not be releasing a self- driving car any time soon. Part of the reason is that it isn’t owned by a bigger automotive company, and simply doesn’t have the cash to devise such technology.

An Italian private equity group recently took a 37.5 percent stake in the company for $ 229 million) Compare that to Jaguar and Land Rover ( which were once Ford- owned, too), whose owner Tata Motors is spending $ 4.6 billion on research and developmen­t between the brands.

But, I believe, Aston Martin’s reluctance also reflects a unique philosophy.

It builds cars for people who actually love to drive. In another 100 years, I hope that won’t have changed.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY ASTON MARTIN ?? The Aston Martin DB9 grand- touring sports car is available as both a coupe and a convertibl­e.
PHOTO COURTESY ASTON MARTIN The Aston Martin DB9 grand- touring sports car is available as both a coupe and a convertibl­e.

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