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ASTON MARTIN DB4 GT ZAGATO 1960 - 1962
A GUIDE
ASTON MARTIN DB5 1963 - 1965
ASTON MARTIN VANTAGE 1973 - 1989
ASTON MARTIN V8 VANTAGE 1993 - 2000
ASTON MARTIN DB7 VANTAGE VOLANTE 2000 - 2003
ASTON MARTIN V12 VANQUISH 2001 - TO DATE
ASTON MARTIN DB7 GT 2003
ASTON MARTIN DB7 ZAGATO 2003 - 2004
ASTON MARTIN DB9 2004 - TO DATE
W W W. A S TO N M A R T I N . C O M
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ASTON MARTIN TODAY
Over the past nine decades, Aston Martin has
witnessed many changes. In a long and distinguished
history, Aston Martin has seen some good times and
some not so good times.
The fact that Aston Martin has survived is testament
to the strength and resolve of everyone who has ever
been involved with the company: customers and
employees alike.
Now Aston Martin is on the threshold of something
truly special. We are about to enter a new period of
change quite unlike anything we have undergone
before. This is not something new to our company –
Aston Martin has had to continually move to survive.
Over the past three years alone Aston Martin has
been through some of the most dramatic and
profound changes in its entire history.
The launch of the all-new DB9 is a significant
moment as it reflects the company today and the
future direction that we are now taking. But it’s more
than just a launch of a new car; it’s the re-launch of
Aston Martin as a brand. It is a signal that Aston
Martin is set to become a serious contender in the
world sports car market.
Our plans do not end there. In addition to the
Vanquish and the DB9, we will introduce a third
model line in with the addition of the V8 Vantage and
this will allow just a few more people access to what
we regard as the world’s most exclusive sportscar
company.
However, Aston Martin is not about to become a
mass producer – we will not forget our roots or the
special aspects of the brand that make up our DNA.
Aston Martin is not about numbers statistics. We are
passionate about the cars we produce and we know
this is a passion shared by our enthusiastic owners.
All of our sports cars will continue to be hand-built
and bespoke but using high technology processes in
a very modern environment.
That ethos goes right back to 1914 and the very
beginnings of the company. Our founders, Lionel
Martin and Robert Bamford, believed that a sports car
should have a distinctive and individual character.
They felt it should be built to the highest standards
and be exhilarating to drive and own – many things
have changed over the ensuing 90 years, but those
goals are still very relevant to us today.
An Aston Martin combines three important elements:
power, beauty and soul. Aston Martins are truly
special – they always have been and always will be.
Dr Ulrich Bez
CEO Aston Martin
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ASTON MARTIN THE PAST
Bamford Martin. It doesn’t have quite the right ring to
it, yet if things had been just a little different, that is
how we would know this most British of performance
cars.
It was back before the Great War that Robert
Bamford and Lionel Martin joined forces to sell Singer
cars, and to prepare them for hill climbing and racing.
Successful, too: it was Martin’s performances with
these cars at the Aston Hill in Hertfordshire that was
to provide the inspiration for a name when the pair
started making their own car.
Robert Bamford
In 1914, Bamford & Martin Ltd moved into premises
in London’s West Kensington and announced the
intention to build its first car: the ‘Coal Scuttle’, as it
was affectionately known, was powered by a
Coventry Simplex side valve engine and was
registered in March 1915.
Further growth was, of course, halted by the war. But
once peace was restored Bamford and Martin
returned to making cars at new premises in
Kensington. And, once again, competition success
proved the product: in May 1922, an Aston Martin
nick-named Bunny broke ten world speed records at
Brooklands, averaging more than 76 mph for 16 and
a half hours of non-stop running.
Lionel Martin
LEFT: Le Mans 1959
In the same year, Aston Martin entered international
racing. With backing from racing driver and
Brooklands legend Count Zborowski, Aston Martin
built two cars for the French Grand Prix.
The first of the company’s many changes of
ownership took place in 1925. Lionel Martin’s heavy
concentration on competition and consequent lack of
production preparation – only around 50 cars were
built between 1921-1925 – found the company in
serious financial problems. Martin left the company
he had founded, handing the reins to the Charnwood
family, but it was too late and the company went into
receivership.
Augustus Cesare Bertelli, a competitor of Lionel
Martin’s, visited the Kensington workshop in 1925.
Greatly impressed with the quality of the cars
remaining, he arranged a meeting between himself,
his business partner William Somerville Renwick and
Lord Charnwood. It was decided that Lord
Charnwood, using the considerable engineering
talents of Bertelli and Renwick, would form Aston
Martin Motors Ltd and move to new premises in
Feltham, Middlesex.
Renwick and Bertelli had already designed an
advanced single overhead camshaft 1.5-litre engine
which, when placed in a new Aston Martin chassis,
helped create the legendary International. The
International and later Le Mans and Ulster models
became regular race winners with class victories at
Le Mans among the highlights.
In 1932, there was another change of ownership
when Sir Arthur Sutherland took over, placing his son
Gordon in control. More motor racing successes
ensued though Sutherland was also keen to show
that Aston Martin could produce more than just
competition cars.
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ASTON MARTIN THE PAST
Accordingly, in 1936 a conscious step was taken to
develop the road car side of the business and a
2.0-litre engine was developed for use in saloons and
tourers. Early in 1939, an avant-garde prototype was
developed using an early form of space frame
chassis and independent suspension. Known as the
Atom, it was to form the basis of a totally new
generation of Aston Martins… but yet again, war
intervened in company’s progress.
David Brown
Once production resumed after World War 2, it was
time for another change in the company’s fortunes –
and this was to be one of the more far reaching
changes in the history of Aston Martin. In 1947,
although the company was financially more secure
that at any time previously, there still weren’t
sufficient funds to develop a totally new vehicle.
Thus it was at this stage that the name of David
Brown entered the picture. The David Brown Group
of Companies was a highly successful engineering
concern building tractors and other agricultural
machinery. Brown took over Aston Martin and, a few
months later, also acquired another British sports car
manufacturer, Lagonda.
The marriage of these two great names made sound
commercial and engineering sense, not least
because Lagonda, under the supervision of the great
W.O. Bentley, had a newly developed 2.6-litre twin
overhead camshaft engine just looking for a suitable
chassis. Before long, Brown had the solution – the
Aston Martin DB2, where DB stood for David Brown.
The DB2 arrived in 1950 and within two years had
helped increase Aston Martin Lagonda production six
fold. In 1948, the company made just 57 cars; by the
end of 1952, production had jumped to 351. In 1954,
the bigger and more powerful DB2/4 accounted for
240 of the company’s total output of 324 cars. At this
stage, production continued in Feltham with engines,
chassis and running gear being assembled at a David
Brown factory in Huddersfield, Yorkshire. The time
was right to merge all operations under one roof.
And that one roof became Aston Martin’s spiritual
home. It was in 1954 that David Brown bought
Tickford Motor Bodies in Newport Pagnell, and it is on
that site today where the superb Vanquish is handbuilt. The site has a long and illustrious coachbuilding history and was originally occupied by
Salmons and Son, ‘Coachbuilders to the Nobility’.
Again, bringing Tickford within the fold made sound
commercial sense as the company was
at that time supplying bodies to Lagonda.
For the first few years of the new partnership, car
assembly continued in Yorkshire with the manufacture
of engines and other components established at
Newport Pagnell.
In 1957, the DB Mark III superseded the DB2/4 Mark
II, the first Aston Martin to be built at Newport
Pagnell, and brought with it many technical advances
proven on the race tracks. It was one of the first
production cars to have disc brakes as standard, for
example.
Racing continued to be the life blood of the company.
Countless class wins at Le Mans and elsewhere fell
to the DB2, while the purpose-built DBR1 conquered
the world’s race tracks in the mid to late 1950s.
Under the guidance of celebrated team manager
John Wyer, Aston Martin won no fewer than six World
Championship races, success culminating in outright
victory at Le Mans and the World Sports Car
Championship crown in 1959.
LEFT: 1959 DBR1 competing in the World Sports Car Championship
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ASTON MARTIN THE PAST
There was success on the road car side of the
business, too. In 1958, the stunning DB4 was
unveiled, with styling by Touring of Milan. The shape
and the engine – a 3.7-litre all-aluminium six cylinder
unit designed by Tadek Marek – were to become
Aston Martin signatures for years to come.
As the DB4 led to the DB5 and DB6 – taking in track
success with the DB4GT and film superstardom
courtesy James Bond and Goldfinger along the way –
so Aston decided to concentrate on road car
production. In 1964, production increased from
around 250 a year to peak at 591 in 1966 when the
DB6 and DB6 Volante – the first European car with a
power hood – went on sale. By this time, production
of the hugely expensive Lagonda Rapide had
ceased.
In the quest for more power and luxury, Marek
developed a V8 engine which was to power the DBS,
the first totally new shape from Aston Martin since
the introduction of the DB4.
But its arrival coincided with another of those
character-building changes for the company. In 1972,
David Brown sold Aston Martin to Company
Developments, a group of Birmingham-based
businessmen. Brown, now Sir David, retained a seat
on the board as the DBS was restyled and re-named:
the six cylinder car became the Aston Martin Vantage
with its bigger engined sister called the Aston Martin
V8: the DB prefix was lost.
LEFT: DB5
Alas, Company Developments soon discovered that
running a prestige automotive business needed
regular and large injections of capital. After just two
years of difficult trading which, nevertheless produced
some 256 cars in 1974 and which recorded the
regaining of Aston Martin’s entry certificate to the
USA, the company was up for sale again and
production reduced to a trickle.
The company was put into receivership and the end
looked inevitable until to its rescue came four
individuals: North American Peter Sprague, Canadian
George Minden and two Englishmen, Alan Curtis and
Denis Flather. Production was cranked up and the
Lagonda named revived: 1976 saw the unveiling of
the outrageous William Towns-designed Lagonda
limousine, its sharp, straight lines, described at the
time as ‘origami on wheels’.
Stability was not part of the equation, though. In
1981, the company changed hands yet again when
Pace Petroleum, a privately-owned company led by
Victor Gauntlett, and CH Industrials took control. One
of the new company’s first decisions was to return to
motor sport, via an association with Nimrod Racing
Automobiles to whom works assistance was
provided. Although unable to repeat the successes of
the 1950s, third in the World Endurance
Championship by a privately entered Nimrod at the
end of its first year back on track was no mean
achievement. Road car production, meanwhile,
continued at steady levels, peaking at 214 in 1987 –
some way off those heady DB days.
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ASTON MARTIN THE PAST
In 1987 when Ford acquired 75 per cent of the
shares – the remainder was split evenly between the
Livanos family and Gauntlett – and long term stability,
finally, arrived. That same year, James Bond was
reunited with Aston Martin, driving an AMV8 in The
Living Daylights, while the following year, 1988, the
new Virage appeared.
AMV8 Vantage
Over the next five or six years, life at Aston Martin
continued largely unchanged, but things were
happening behind the scenes as Ford planned
the future for its new acquisition. Long-serving
executive chairman Victor Gauntlett handed over
control to another legend, Walter Hayes CBE, a
former Ford of Europe Vice-Chairman. There was
also another return to competition, with a creditable
6th overall for the AMR1 in the 1989 World
Endurance Championship. (plans were hatched for a
new small Aston Martin).
The new car couldn’t come soon enough. The early
1990s saw a recession hit the UK and sales of the
big V8-powered Virage and Virage Volante dwindled:
in 1992, just 46 cars were built. So it was that in 1993
at the Geneva Show, Aston Martin proudly showed
the new DB7, a model imbued with the spirit of those
classic DB models of the 1960s. Indeed, the entire
project was encouraged by Sir David Brown, who
died at the end of 1993.
LEFT: The luxurious Lagonda
The DB7 marked a significant change in Aston
Martin’s fortunes and work practices. For starters it
was built not at Newport Pagnell but at a new facility
near Bloxham in Oxfordshire with far more
automation than had traditionally been the case.
Production of the DB7 started in late 1994, the same
year that Ford acquired a 100 per cent holding in the
company, and the rewards were immediate. In 1995,
the first full year of the DB7, Aston Martin produced
more than 700 cars – an all-time record for the
company.
With the arrival of the convertible DB7 Volante in
1996, production has continued at similarly high
levels making the DB7 easily the most successful
model in Aston Martin’s history. By the end of 2001,
DB7 production had passed the 5,000 milestone and
outstripped the combined total production of DB5
and DB6 models.
This same period saw a new V8 model developed
from the Virage, culminating in the hugely powerful
V8 Vantage, the last example of which was delivered
in October 2000. The ‘V’ car traditional continued at
Newport Pagnell, however, with the launch in 2001
of the V12-powered Vanquish.
In 2002 Aston Martin unveiled the first purpose-built
facility in the history of the company at Gaydon in
Warwickshire. The DB9 will be the first car to be built
at the facility, which will be the home of all future
Aston Martins.
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ASTON MARTIN THE PRESENT
The 21st Century has seen an astonishing change of
pace at Aston Martin. With production during the final
four years of the previous century running between
620 and 660 models a year, the year 2000 saw a
huge jump to 1,029 units, 1,000 of which were the
newly developed V8-powered DB7 Vantage. And
production rose by almost 50 per cent in 2001 to
1,506 cars. Again the lion’s share was of DB7
variants, but 204 Vanquish V12s helped make up the
total. In 2003, Aston Martin created a sales record of
nearly 1,600 cars and another record was created in
the US with 500, cars sold representing 33% of our
production volume.
Vanquish production continues at Newport Pagnell
and is also home to Works Prepared, for
development of customer-driven specialist projects,
as well as Heritage Operations, which restores older
Aston Martin models
The company’s new state of the art Gaydon facility
begins a new chapter in Aston Martin’s history. As the
new company headquarters, Gaydon will house
production of the DB9 and all future Aston Martin
models.
At the end of 2003, Aston Martin announced it would
return to international motor sport using the DB9 as a
base car.
LEFT: Customer atrium at Gaydon
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ASTON MARTIN THE FUTURE
Aston Martin’s future model plans are, naturally, a
closely guarded secret known only within the
organisation.
What is in the public domain, however, shows that
Aston Martin’s future is not only safe but very
exciting.
Gaydon is the future of Aston Martin. It combines
cutting-edge technology with-craftsmanship and
tradition. It is here that a third model line will be built,
which is designed to widen the Aston Martin
ownership opportunity still further. Not that Aston
Martin is about to become a volume sports car
manufacturer: while numbers will rise in large
percentage terms when the new model arrives, Aston
Martin’s total annual production will still be far fewer
than most other sports car manufacturers.
As CEO, Dr Ulrich Bez says: “Aston Martin is not
about numbers. It is not about market share, volume
or even performance figures. It never has been and it
never will be. Aston Martin is about individuality,
emotions, feelings, passion, personal experience and
participation.
“By increasing the number of cars we make we can
simply allow a few more people to enjoy the Aston
Martin experience.”
LEFT: Design studio at Gaydon
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ASTON MARTIN THE CRAFT
A typical modern car factory is a soulless place where
cars are churned out as if they were white goods…
fridges on wheels. Things aren’t like that at Newport
Pagnell, home of the Aston Martin Vanquish. Here in
the very same buildings that produced such enduring
classics as the DB4/5/6 and the later ‘V’ cars – like
the V8 and the Virage – theVanquish is assembled.
That said, there is a consistency and uniformity about
the Superform panels ensure far greater accuracy,
build quality and panel fit than has been enjoyed by
Aston Martins in the past. As a result, production
quality is more consistent than before which ensures
that the latest generation of Aston Martin cars are the
best yet.
In the not-too-distant past, Aston Martins created at
Newport Pagnell were largely built by hand. Panels
were hand formed, lovingly smoothed into shape by a
combination of trained eye and experienced hand.
In contrast, production of the Vanquish bristles with
modern techniques and space age materials. But the
Vanquish remains far from mass-produced. Each car
takes between six to eight weeks to build and each is
built to individual customer specification: no two cars
are exactly alike. In a typical year, Aston Martin
expects to make only a few hundred examples of the
Vanquish.
Great advances have been made in the paint
processes, too. Vanquish is available in any colour
requested by the customer and spends a total of
three hours in the paint bay being given no fewer
than eight coats of paint and lacquer.
The body tub and panels are preformed mixing
lightweight aluminium with the latest composite
materials, but even so, a large degree of hand
finishing is required before the Vanquish can take
shape – each Superform aluminium front wing, for
example, takes some five hours of hand smoothing
and detail shaping before it is ready to be offered, by
hand, to the body.
LEFT: State-of-the-art paint shop at Gaydon
Once the body has been assembled, painted and
partially trimmed, it is made ready to accept the
powertrain. Such is the size of the engine and
transmission assembly, however, that the old way of
lowering the powertrain into the car can no longer be
undertaken. Instead the body/chassis is lowered onto
the powertrain.
After final trimming, with leather covered panels and
trimmed seats created in house, each car undergoes
a quality inspection – indeed, three cars in every
eight are picked at random for a detailed quality audit
– before it is ready for the final stage of the build
process: the test drive.
There is no such thing as a zero-mile Vanquish.
Every car is given a 40 mile shakedown test drive at
the demanding Millbrook proving ground before being
given the all clear by Aston Martin’s Quality Inspector,
who personally checks every finished car before
signing it off. It’s his name that adorns the famous
plaque placed on every finished car signifying it is
ready for its new owner.
In the trim shop a team of dedicated professionals
hand cut and stitch the leather hides that help give
every Aston Martin its unique ambience.
Its cars might be at the leading edge of 21st Century
automotive engineering, but there is still plenty of
room for traditional skills to play their part at Aston
Martin.
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ASTON MARTIN WORKS SERVICE
The Newport Pagnell site not only houses Aston
Martin’s Vanquish production facility, it is also home
to Works Service, a unique customer-facing operation
that keep the Aston Martin flame alive.
Behind the customer welcome centre on the opposite
side of the road to the production facility lies an
enthusiast’s dream. Dozens of older Aston Martins
and Lagondas sit patiently side by side awaiting their
turn for attention. Some are in merely for a service or
minor repair, others are undergoing major work or
total ground up restoration.
Many owners take the opportunity of having their
Aston Martin maintained by the very people who built
it. Indeed, no other British motor manufacturer has
such a long and distinguished record of factory
backed maintenance.
The Aston Martin Works Service Department is able
to undertake scheduled and unscheduled
maintenance on all post 1950 Aston Martin cars from
DB2 through to our latest V8 Vantage and DB7
models.
Through the use of our Blackhawk Korek 4000 body
alignment system, heavy collision damage can be
accurately repaired ensuring correct suspension
geometry and panel alignment. Our factory trained
technicians utilise skills both traditional and state of
the art; from a twist of a wooden handled screwdriver
to the operation of the latest in microprocessor
diagnostic equipment.
On restoration projects, all Aston Martin’s skills are
combined to bring a cherished motor car back to its
former glory.
After the initial contact we will invite the owner to visit
our premises in Newport Pagnell so that a complete
assessment of the car can be carried out. If this
proves to be impractical we will carry out the
assessment at the customer’s own premises. The
assessment will include a partial strip down to gauge
the extent of the necessary repairs.
The original vehicle build history will be drawn from
our archives and referred to throughout the process
to ensure originality. Our experienced technical staff
will then provide a detailed, itemised estimate for the
necessary refurbishment or replacement of
components. Once approval is given the car will be
fullystripped down in readiness for each area to be
restored.
Heritage is an important part of the Aston Martin story
and Works Service helps keep that heritage alive.
LEFT: Aston Martins old and new are still looked after by the people that made them
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ASTON MARTIN HERITAGE AND PARTS
Aston Martin Heritage Operations, is our vision of a
bright future for our celebrated past.
The company has always taken pride in looking after
its own, and through Heritage Operations we are
renewing our commitment to preserve the
generations of classic Aston Martins across the world.
It has been calculated that over 75% of all Aston
Martins ever built are still on the road today.
This is a true reflection of the respect and loyalty in
which these cars are held and far outweighs the
volumes involved. Many cars stay in the same family
for decades and are handed down to the next
generation as a matter of course. Once the Aston
passion is in the blood, it is very difficult to remove.
Our aim in life is not only to share that passion with
our customers, but to provide the support and parts
service to enable owners past, present and future to
enjoy their cars with the confidence that they have "A
Car for Life".
Aston Martin also operates a state-of-the-art parts
and distribution service from Wolverton, Milton
Keynes, supplying parts for classic Aston Martin cars
dating back to 1958.
LEFT: Single biggest supplier of genuine parts in the world
Our facilities provide for a maximum of 38,000 part
locations for, currently, 33,000 different part numbers.
We are the single biggest supplier of genuine parts in
the world, from DB4 to current production.
Additionally, we provide an exclusive technical
support service to Dealers, owners and enthusiasts.
Aston Martin continues to promote and preserve the
'Car for Life' theme with a unique service designed
and dedicated to meet the demands of all our
customers.
The lack of information on technical data, parts
manuals, workshop manuals and part number
supersessions can sometimes cause confusion when
ordering parts for older cars. At Aston Martin we have
five specialist technicians who are available to
answer any and all questions or queries, giving
professional advice on the right part for the right car,
right first time.
Aston Martin has always been receptive to the
demands of its customers with the result that many
extremely rare and unique cars have been produced
for discerning owners. In support of these cars the
Parts and Distribution Department has been built
around a total dedication to meeting the demands of
those customers.
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ASTON MARTIN DB7 VANTAGE AND VOLANTE
DB7 Zagato
Launched in 1993, the DB7 became the backbone of
Aston Martin. Its international attraction has meant
that it became the most successful Aston Martin
model of all time – exceeding the combined
production of the classic DB4, DB5 and DB6. Of the
20,000 cars produced in Aston Martin’s history more
than 7,000 are DB7’s – proving how important a car it
was in providing continued growth to the company.
The introduction of the DB7 Vantage was the direct
result of a concentrated 24 months design and
development programme, which included a complete
appraisal of all aspects of the design and the
dynamics of the DB7. Customer reaction was
phenomenal. In 2001, annual worldwide sales of the
DB7 totalled 1,339, an increase of nearly 50% from
1999.
The DB7 received many subtle but effective changes
over its 10 year life to complement the elegant, yet
classic body design which, since 1993 has
epitomised the pedigree, heritage and tradition of
Aston Martin.
In 2002, Aston Martin launched the most powerful
Aston Martin DB7 model ever - the DB7 GT.
Unveiled at Aston Martin’s home motor show at
Birmingham, the DB7 GT was seen as an evolution
of the DB7 Vantage. Finely engineered it offered
customers a new dimension to the Aston Martin DB7
driving experience.
Although it didn’t appear for almost three years after
the DB7’s unveiling at the 1993 Geneva Show, Aston
Martin had every intention of creating a soft-top
version. At the Detroit and Los Angeles auto shows
in January 1996 Aston Martin launched the DB7
Volante whilst announcing the availability of the
Coupe in North America, a crucial export market.
Originally equipped with a 6-cylinder supercharged
engine, the DB7 received significant engineering
enhancements in 1999 with the introduction of the
DB7 Vantage – the first Aston Martin to use a V12
engine.
DB AR1
At the 2002 Paris Motor Show, Aston Martin and
Zagato created a new, limited edition model for the
21st Century based on the DB7. With more power
than the standard car the DB7 Zagato had uprated
brakes, sports suspension, a revised interior and an
all-new 2-seater aluminium coupe body. The large
distinctive radiator grille and accentuating rear wheel
arches are unmistakably from Zagato, whilst the
carefully detailed features such as the reverse/fog
light combination provide graphic evidence of the
painstaking hand craftsmanship and quality that has
become an Aston Martin trademark - all 99 cars
produced were sold within weeks of launch.
Less than six months later Aston Martin and Zagato
revealed another project – the DB AR1 – a roadster
version of the DB7 designed specifically for the US
market. Like its sister car, the DB7 Zagato, all 99
were sold within weeks of being shown at the 2003
Los Angeles Motor Show.
LEFT: DB7 GT
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ASTON MARTIN V12 VANQUISH
Since its introduction in 2001, the V12 Vanquish has
proved to be one of the most significant Aston Martin
models ever, pioneering the use of advanced
technologies and materials such as aluminium and
carbon fibre. Furthermore, its on screen appearance
in the latest James Bond film ‘Die Another Day’ has
ensured the V12 Vanquish has created international
appeal for the Aston Martin brand.
With the capacity to continue to turn heads, the
design of the V12 Vanquish is already established as
a modern classic. Perfectly proportioned from every
aspect, design confirms the promise of outstanding
“Supercar” performance and an impeccable pedigree
that makes the V12 Vanquish the flagship Aston
Martin model.
The aluminium and carbon fibre technology
developed for the car’s structure is a world first
combining dimensional accuracy, durability, efficiency,
safety and best-in-class torsional strength for superior
handling.
LEFT: V12 Vanquish
All the exterior body panels are constructed from
aluminium with each individual panel hand tailored to
the central structure to ensure a perfect panel fit.
Every carefully detailed feature provides graphic
evidence of the painstaking craftsmanship and
quality, which is invested in its construction.
The 6.0-litre V12 produces a prodigious
460 bhp, enough to power the Vanquish to a top
speed of 190 mph and a sub 5.0 second 0-60 mph
time.
It is coupled to a class leading Formula 1 style
six-speed sequential manual transmission and
electro-hydraulic clutch that operates without the
use of a conventional clutch pedal. Gear changing is
performed via levers behind the steering wheel.
This superb performance is matched by a supremely
luxurious interior and a complete standard equipment
list.
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ASTON MARTIN GAYDON
Gaydon symbolises the future of Aston Martin.
A combination of cutting-edge technology, handcraftsmanship and tradition ensure the facility is
probably amongst the best of its type in the world.
The dramatic architecture of Aston Martin’s new
Gaydon home and the elegant materials used in its
construction reflect the quality of the design and finish
of the cars themselves.
The new facility at Gaydon comprises an office block
and adjoining production building. The office block is
two floors high with two entrances, one for staff and
visitors and the other for customers.
Accurate measuring of every chassis built at Gaydon
ensures each car is built to within the smallest
tolerance levels. Only by using precision measuring
equipment can we ensure that every car will enjoy
the same high standards of handling, road holding
and refinement.
The building has been set in a gently undulating
landscape emulating an English country estate –
reflected in the stone of the reception elevation.
Gaydon’s sweeping curves and lack of decoration
suggest a company that is dynamic and
contemporary.
The offices are immediately adjacent to the
production building separated by the double-height
‘street’ which acts as an informal meeting area and a
light well to the back of the deep, open-plan, office
floor plates.
The production facility provides a clean, clutter free,
modern environment where ease of communication is
paramount and all members of staff, production and
office, can work together. It has silver clad walls, a
gently barrel-vaulted roof and a polished concrete
floor slab containing the production lines in one large
room.
LEFT: Gaydon - the first purpose built facility in Aston Martin’s history
Rather than entrust the painting of an Aston Martin to
a machine, every car is painted by experts using the
latest quality equipment. Achieving the finish of an
Aston Martin is one of the most labour intensive
aspects of its production.
Unlike most car factories – where cars sit on a
moving line and production is completed against the
clock – building an Aston Martin takes place at a less
frenetic pace. Approximately 200 man-hours are
involved in building each DB9. Cars are made in a
series of work stations, where technicians hand-build
the cars. Once work is completed at one station, the
bodies are moved to the next station on the small
indexed line: the key word is quality and we take our
time to achieve it.
Although today’s Aston Martins are built in far greater
numbers than their predecessors, Aston Martin
remains a long way from being a mass-producer.
Each car remains essentially hand built by craftsmen
with decades of experience beneath their fingertips.
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ASTON MARTIN DB9
The future of Aston Martin is epitomised by the all
new DB9, a 2+2 seater sports car that sets new
standards in its class due to its astonishing
combination of agility, V12 power, smoothness,
beautiful design and hand craftsmanship.
Using a radical new aluminium-bonded body frame,
the DB9 is one of the most sophisticated and
technically advanced sports cars in the world. It is
powered by the latest version of Aston Martin's 6.0litre V12, producing 450bhp and a top speed of
186mph. Yet the DB9 is significant well beyond being
a class-leading sports car. It is the beginning of a new
era for Aston Martin. It is the first car to be handmade at Aston Martin's new state-of-the-art facility in
Gaydon, Warwickshire, where all future Aston Martin
models will be developed and built.
The body frame is the most structurally efficient in the
world, taking into account strength, torsional rigidity
and weight. It has double the rigidity of many rivals,
as well as being lighter, resulting in superior handling
and agility.
The elegant DB9 Volante
LEFT: The DB9 - a totally modern Aston Martin
All body panels are either aluminium or lightweight
composites with magnesium being used on the
steering column and inner door frames. Even the
gear selector paddles are made from magnesium
alloy. The total weight is 1710kgs, extremely light for
a V12-powered prestige 2+2 seater sports car with
every imaginable luxury feature. This has a hugely
beneficial effect on performance. Top speed of the
manual is 186mph and 0-100 km/h (62mph)
acceleration takes just 4.9 seconds. Other
technologically radical features include a ZF 'drive-bywire' six-speed automatic gearbox that dispenses
with a traditional gear lever. Instead, the drive, park,
neutral and reverse controls are selected by buttons.
Touchtronic manual mode enables the driver to
change gear using paddles mounted behind the
steering wheel. The automatic gearchange has been
tuned to provide the perfect balance between superfast operation and comfortably smooth shifts. A
conventional six-speed manual gearbox will also be
offered.
The agility of the car is boosted by the perfect 50:50
weight distribution. This has been achieved partly by
putting the gearbox at the rear. A carbon fibre drive
shaft, running in a cast aluminium tube, delivers
torque from the engine to the gearbox. Handling is
further improved by the light aluminium wishbone
suspension and aluminium bodied dampers. The
whole DB9 cabin is hand-finished in premium quality
materials giving it a simple and functional feel.
Aluminium is used in the interior, reflecting the most
commonly used material in the structure and body.
Even details such as the instrument dials are made
from aluminium. Features include full leather Bridge
of Weir upholstery of the highest quality and a state
of the art music system specially developed for Aston
Martin by British sound experts Linn.
Among the many technological firsts is the 'message
centre' in the dashboard. It is an organic
electroluminescent display (OEL), as opposed to the
more common LCD. OELs have a higher resolution
and better contrast and are easier to read, especially
when viewed at an angle. Of course, no Aston Martin
would be an Aston Martin without a beautiful body.
The DB9's is modern and clean but retains much of
its heritage. It is a modern interpretation of a
traditional Aston Martin, the successor to such
benchmark designs as the DB4 and DB5. The
aluminium bonnet is long and extends all the way to
the car's leading edge. There is a minimum number
of 'cut' or 'shut' lines, to aid styling simplicity and
beauty.
The design of an Aston Martin is integral to its
appeal. Taking styling cues from the past, but
reinterpreting them for the future forms the central
theme of every new Aston Martin currently under
development.
The DB9 manages to combine all facets of style,
quality and useability of a traditional Aston Martin
without relying on retrospective detail or design. It is
a totally modern Aston Martin.
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ASTON MARTIN TIME LINE
1913 Bamford and Martin Limited founded in London
1955 DB2/4 Mark II goes into production
1914 Aston Martin name is born following success at
Aston Hill Climb
1956 During this and the following three years, four
DBR1 race cars are built for competition.
1915 First Aston Martin is registered
1957 DB Mk III goes into production
1921 First works competition car makes its
appearance
1958 DB4 goes into production
1922 Aston Martin makes first appearance overseas
at French Grand Prix
1924 Charnwood family lend financial support
1959 Aston Martin wins World Sportscar
Championship in the DBR1 following wins at
the 1000kms at the Nurburgring, Le Mans and
the RAC Tourist Trophy
1925 Company forced to close
1963 Roy Salvadori wins at Monza in a DB4GT.
DB5 goes into production
1926 Aston Martin Motors Limited is formed and sets
up in Feltham
1965 DB6 goes into production
1928 First entry at the Le Mans 24 hour race
1931 Bertelli temporarily ‘pawns’ his company to
finance the Works cars
1932 Sutherland family take over the company
1937 140 cars built – the highest pre-war production
figure
1939 The Atom is built
1949 Company advertised for sale in The Times
1947 David Brown buys Aston Martin Motors Limited
and Lagonda
1967 DBS goes into production
1969 DB6 Mark 2 goes into production
DBSV8 goes into production
1972 David Brown sells and Company
Developments takes over.
Aston Martin Vantage and Aston Martin V8
goes into production
1975 Receivership declared and company rescued
by consortium led by Peter Sprague and
George Minden.
1976 William Towns-designed Lagonda unveiled
1948 The Spa Special wins the Spa 24 hour race.
Aston Martin 2 litre is built
1977 V8 Vantage goes into production
1949 Two DB2 prototypes enter Le Mans and one is
placed in its class
1980 Towns ’ Lagonda goes into production
1950 DB2 goes into production
1951 DB2 comes 1st, 2nd and 3rd in the 3 litre class
at Le Mans
1953 DB2/4 goes into production – the first 2+2
seater
1954 David Brown buys Tickfords and moves
production to Newport Pagnell
LEFT: The AMV8 Vantage
1978 V8 Volante goes into production
1989 Works supported AMR1 comes 6th in the
World Championship
1990 Virage production starts
1991 Victor Gauntlett resigns and is replaced by
Walter Hayes
1992 Virage Volante goes into production
1993 Vantage goes into production
1994 Ford Motor Company acquires 100% holding in
Aston Martin. DB7 goes into production
1996 DB7 Volante goes into production
V8 Coupe goes into production
1997 V8 Volante goes into production
1999 V8 Vantage Le Mans goes into production.
DB7 Vantage goes into production
2000 Dr Ulrich Bez appointed CEO of Aston Martin
2001 The 5,000th DB7 is built
V12 Vanquish goes into production
2002 After almost 15 years, Aston Martin renews its
relationship with legendary Italian
coachbuilders Zagato to produce the limited
edition DB7 Zagato
2003 and beyond
Aston Martin unveil the AMV8 Vantage concept
car at the Detroit Motor Show
1000th Vanquish is built
DB9 Coupe goes into production
1981 Victor Gauntlett and Pace Petroleum take over
The new Gaydon manufacturing facility is
officially opened. It is the first purpose built
factory in Aston Martin’s history
1983 Victor Gauntlett is backed financially by the
Livanos shipping family
Aston Martin announces a return to racing
1986 V8 Vantage Zagato goes into production
AMV8 Vantage goes into production
1987 V8 Volante Zagato goes into production
Ford Motor Company takes a 75%
shareholding
DB9 Volante goes into production
AM Brochure 1
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