15 Feb

Aston Martin Virage Coupe Review

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It’s not an all-new car, but the Aston Martin Virage is still an important addition to the firm’s line-up. The looks are similar to the DB9′s, but apart from the roof and windscreen, every body panel is brand new. The result is a sharper, more masculine look than the DB9, while LED daytime running lights further distinguish the newcomer. Under the skin, the Virage uses the same hand-built 6.0-litre V12 as its stablemates, but it has 490bhp, which is 20bhp more than the DB9 and 20bhp less than the DBS. A six-speed automatic is the sole gearbox choice, which is operated via steering wheel-mounted paddles. As you would expect, straight line performance is immense, while in corners the standard-fit adaptive dampers mean the Virage can deliver a focused performance. However, a button on the dashboard allows you to soften off the suspension for relaxed cruising.

Drive

4.8 /5

Adaptive dampers transform car’s character

The Virage is a big, heavy sports car, but that big V12 engine means straight-line performance is stunning. Surprisingly, it likes to be revved to get the most from it, but the six-speed auto gearbox has slick shifts and is easy to use. The adaptive dampers mean the Virage can be transformed from a relaxed grand tourer into a focused sports car at the push of a button.

Comfort

4.7 /5

Plush interior is hugely comfortable

The Virage has a hand-made interior that uses the finest materials, so it’s hugely comfortable for two. Long-distance comfort is excellent, although the adaptive dampers sometimes have trouble dealing with successive bumps in the road.

Reliability

4.0 /5

Tried and tested mechanicals are used throughout

As the Virage uses the same 6.0-litre V12 as the DB9 and DBS, it should prove to be a reliable unit. Service intervals of 10,000 miles are relatively short, and you can expect steep costs when you visit your dealer.

Practicality

3.8 /5

Luxury coupe has room for overnight bags

There’s a 184-litre boot, which is big enough for a couple of golf bags, but the boot opening is narrow. There’s a pair of seats in the back, but they’re tiny and only really suitable as an extra storage space – Aston Martin even offers the option of deleting the rear seats completely.

Value for money

3.5 /5

You pay a premium for that badge

The Aston Martin Virage slots between the DB9 and DBS in the range, so it’s priced accordingly. At £150,000, it’s £20,000 more than the DB9, but it’s worth the extra outlay for the added performance and handling that’s on offer.

Running costs

Don’t expect much more than 20mpg in normal driving

That 6.0-litre V12 means running costs will be steep, both in terms of what you’ll pay to fill up with petrol and what you’ll pay in tax. Servicing costs will be high, too, although if you’re in the market for an Aston Martin, you can probably afford the running costs, too.

1. Exterior

If the DB9 is a head turning work of automotive art then the Aston Martin Virage is an absolute masterpiece. The changes are subtle, but details like the re-profiled grille, revised wings and the new headlamps all combine to create an edgier, more contemporary take on the DB9’s elegant lines. Not hugely adventurous stuff from Aston Martin admittedly, but enough to allow the Virage fulfil its role as the middle-ground between the DB9 and DBS. Sat alongside a DB9, the Virage is tauter and more chiselled, though it manages to eschew the DBS’s rather extrovert, somewhat aftermarket styling.

Our rating: 5

2. Interior

Like the exterior there are few real surprises inside the Virage for those used to the cabin of a DB9. That does mean there is plenty of beautifully finished leather, high gloss wood and brushed metal. Unsurprisingly, it’s styled particularly neatly, Aston’s mix of materials particularly nicely judged – even the Volvo-sourced air vents. It might be easy on the eye, but aside for the obvious big push buttons for the automatic transmission – the Virage not being offered with a manual – the smaller controls are a bit fiddly.

Our rating: 4

3. Practicality

The specification says 2+2, but you’ll need to be flexible and small to fit in the rear of the Virage. Best then not to bother trying and instead specify the optional hard-backed sports seats. This means losing the rear seats altogether and using the shelves for additional luggage space. The boot will take a golf bag or two, but getting them in won’t be particularly easy. Soft bags are best for the boot then. In the cabin there’s decent oddment storage, though the glovebox isn’t huge – think sunglasses and iPod only.

Our rating: 3

4. Ride and handling

Riding on the same basic suspension of the DB9 but with a few revisions to make it sharper, the Virage is supple but exceptionally well controlled. It rides on an adaptive damping system that manages this tricky balance, though in Sport mode the ride goes from taut to too-stiff for our crumbling roads. Reduced unsprung mass thanks to lighter standard carbon ceramic brake discs help the Virage ride so well – they also stop it very effectively. The steering is quick and nicely weighted and the electronic stability control systems intervention levels are high enough to enjoy the Virage’s ample power.

Our rating: 5

5. Performance

The Virage’s 6.0-litre V12 engine’s output is a healthy 490bhp, which allows it to reach 62mph in 4.6 seconds and a top speed of 186mph. It’s only offered with Aston Martin’s TouchTronic gearbox, which can be either left alone or shifted via steering column mounted paddles. It’s a quick, smooth shifter, while the V12’s ample mid and low range torque is backed up with real high-rev fireworks when you’re in a hurry. It sounds great, though it’s better from the side of the road than within. Fast, yet not as fearsome as the DBS, the Virage is a consummate all-rounder.

Our rating: 5

6. Running costs

Aston Martins aren’t cheap to buy, so don’t expect them to be cheap to run. The 6.0-litre V12 engine in the Virage develops more power than the DB9’s, which suggests it’ll consume a bit more fuel. Aston hasn’t revealed official figures as yet, but expect everyday driving to result in consumption of around 12-15mpg. Fuel aside, servicing, insurance and road tax won’t be inexpensive either.

Our rating: 3

7. Reliability

The DB9, which this Virage is heavily based on, has been around for a while now, and although it’s not got a blemish-free reliability record Aston Martin has improved in recent years. That should mean the Virage offers relatively trouble-free motoring. The company’s recent endurance racing success underlines the durability of the mechanicals.

Our rating: 4

8. Safety

Like its DB9 relative the Virage comes with electronic stability and traction control systems, anti-lock brakes, front and side driver and passenger airbags and seatbelt pretensioners among its standard safety equipment. If you opt for the sports bucket seats you lose not only the rear seats, but the side airbags, too. The Virage hasn’t been independently crash tested, but its long nose, front engined layout and stiff extruded aluminium structure should mean it’s safe should the worst happen.

Our rating: 3

9. Equipment

Equipment is where the Virage really aces its DB9 relative. Along with the additional power and poise the Virage gains powerful and lightweight carbon ceramic brakes as standard, while the hopeless Volvo-sourced sat-nav is replaced by an all-new system developed by Aston Martin and Garmin. Add in the usual luxury refinements you’d expect for this money – leather, electrically operated seats etc. – and the Virage actually represents decent value in its class.

Our rating: 4

10. Why buy?

If you like the DB9 you’ll love the Virage. It looks better, drives better, has more equipment and yet it’s only around £25,000 more. To specify the carbon ceramic brakes alone in a DB9 you’d need £15,000, which makes the DB9 look a bit defunct. What’s impressive though is how it nibbles away at the DBS making a case for itself too. It retains its impressive GT credentials, but gains a degree of more sporting appeal, making it the only sensible choice in the DB9-based family line-up.

Our rating: 5

Aston Martin has taken the wraps of its new Virage Coupe and Virage Volante. Both models are based on the automaker’s VH architecture – so they’re “all-new”… kinda – and are meant to slot in between the DB9 and the DBS in the lineup. The bonded aluminum chassis, with aluminum, magnesium and composite body panels, receives the familiar 6.0-liter V12 rated at 490 horsepower and 420 pound-feet of torque. The standard transmission (a rear transaxle) is a six-speed automatic “Touchtronic 2″ gearbox, helping to deliver a 0-60 time of about 4.5 seconds and maxing out at a top speed of 186 miles per hour.

The suspension is double-wishbone on all four corners, with Aston Martin’s Adaptive Damping System (ADS) with Sport mode as standard equipment. Wheels are 20-inch alloys, mounted over carbon ceramic disc brakes at all four corners (six-piston calipers up front, four-piston units in the rear), with Pirelli P Zero tires standard.

No word yet on pricing or availablity (feel free to read through the press release after the break), but we’ll be getting all the details on the new Virage at next week’s Geneva Motor Show. Expect driving impressions to come… soon.

The Virage was Aston Martin‘s replacement for the decades-old V8 models. Introduced at the Birmingham Motor Show in 1988,[1] it was joined by the high-performance Vantage in 1993, and the name of the standard car was changed to V8 in 1996.

This V8-powered car was intended as the company’s top model, with the 6-cylinder 1994 DB7 slotted below it. Although the DB7 switched to a V12 engine and claimed the performance crown, this V8 model (by then in Vantage form) remained the exclusive, expensive, and hand-built king of Astons. It was replaced in 2000 with the Vanquish. The V8 Vantage name reappeared on a new entry-level model in 2005. By the end of the 2000 model year, 1,050 of all Virage related models had been produced.

A new generation Virage is to be introduced at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show, to fit into the middle of Aston Martin’s current lineup.

Back in the late ’80s, Aston Martin unveiled the Virage — a car designed to replace the company’s ageing V8 and DBSV8 models. The response was muted to say the least. Some glanced at it and shrugged, pieces of tumbleweed rolled by and almost everyone, with the exception of the super-rich, spent their £120,000 on more important things. Like houses.

Fast-forward 20 years or so and Aston Martin has resurrected the Virage name for a brand new car. Its task this time around isn’t to replace an existing model, but rather to marry the best aspects of the soft, glamorous DB9 grand tourer and the more hard-core DBS. But has Aston Martin succeeded in its mission? Is there space in its line-up for yet another Virage? Will anyone even bat an eyelid? We hopped in the £150,000 coupé edition to find out.

Déjà vu

The new Virage doesn’t look wildly different from anything else in Aston Martin’s range, barring the bonkers One-77 and the Cygnet. You’ll have trouble picking it out of an Aston Martin line-up unless you’re intimately familiar with the range.

The Virage’s single-lens headlights, which sport an LED light strip, were first seen on the Rapide. Its bonnet and front grille are borrowed from the DB9 and its rear-light clusters look like they were sourced from a box labelled ‘Vantage‘.

The Virage looks much like any other Aston Martin. That’s no bad thing, though.

There are some unique features, though. The splitter below the front air intake is exclusive to the Virage, as is the rear exhaust housing, which provides a pleasing middle ground between the extreme-looking rear diffuser seen on the DBS and the understated backside on the DB9.

The design probably isn’t different enough to convince existing Aston Martin owners to upgrade, and there are many who will feel disappointed by the company’s reluctance to design something outside of its comfort zone. That said, the Virage is so incredibly gorgeous that those with qualms about its design really are missing the point. Aston Martin’s stumbled on a magical formula for creating drop-dead gorgeous cars, and the old adage holds true — if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

Inside job

There are few surprises on the inside of the Virage. The interior is largely identical to that of almost all the company’s existing cars, with the same curvaceous, muscular dashboard, forged aluminium speedometer surrounds, and a designer key-cum-starter-button made of crystal.

The car also comes with an Aston Martin-branded Lamy Pico pocket pen, which slots into the centre console. It clicks securely into place and doesn’t rattle about. Don’t lose it, though — a replacement will set you back a whopping €80 (£70).

Also new is a motorised navigation display that flips open from the centre of the dashboard. This 6.5-inch unit is larger than the 6-inch display that came before it, and has a noticeably higher resolution of 800×480 pixels — up from 480×234 pixels on the previous screen. It’s not in the same league as the 15-inch display set to feature in the Tesla Model S, but the screen is a big improvement on those that came before it, thanks to crisp, modern-looking, easy-to-read graphics.

Get lost

The Virage’s sat-nav, provided by Garmin, is a massive improvement on the Volvo-sourced nav system in previous Aston Martin cars. The graphics look fabulous, and it supports full seven-digit postcode entry, which eliminates the need to enter lengthy street names. It even comes with a couple of apps, including a world clock and a calculator.

The sat-nav display flips out from the centre of the dashboard.

It’s by no means the most advanced nav system we’ve encountered. It lacks the live, real-time traffic info of some of the most sophisticated standalone nav systems, and the joystick used to control inputs is still as fiddly as ever. Still, it’s a huge improvement on the outdated Volvo system seen in previous cars.

Sound thinking

Sadly, Aston Martin hasn’t updated the rest of the Virage’s cabin tech. It uses the same horrifically unintuitive control interface as other cars in the range, which means you get a tiny LCD display, six fiddly mode buttons and a wobbly central joystick whose function changes depending on what mode you happen to be in.

The secret is to ensure you’ve pressed the relevant button to activate the music, phone or audio modes before controlling the cursor on the tiny LCD screen using the joystick. Indeed, the mode buttons are backlit to help show you which one has been selected, but each button is so incredibly small and fiddly, and the LCD screen so reflective and so unreadable in direct sunlight, that getting the Virage’s information and entertainment systems to work first time is like trying to fly a space shuttle while blindfolded.

It’s an interface we’ve become familiar with over the years, but our interactions with the system always seem to degenerate into prodding randomly at buttons, praying, rather than expecting, that something will happen.

Speed of sound

If you somehow manage to activate the car’s audio system, you’ll be thoroughly rewarded, particularly if you’ve chosen to upgrade to the £4,500 Bang & Olufsen set-up.

Like the units produced for the Vantage and DBS, the B&O system has a total power output of 1,000W, channelled across 13 separate speakers, including two ‘acoustic lenses’ that rise automatically from the dashboard when the system is powered up.

The Virage’s cabin is ludicrously comfortable.

According to B&O, these lenses allow a wide, 180-degree horizontal dispersion of high frequencies, spraying treble and the higher registers of Mariah Carey’s voice more broadly across the cabin than ordinary speakers would.

In typical B&O tradition, the system also uses a specially optimised digital-signal-processing  unit that ‘stage manages’ your music, tuning it to account for the acoustic properties of this particular car’s cabin.

It’s all very clever, but the bottom line is that the Virage’s audio system sounds brilliant. It’s loud and powerful enough to handle the grimiest dubstep yet refined and well-balanced enough to do justice to genres of music that requires greater levels of acoustic finesse.

Our only issue with the stereo is the fact it doesn’t support very many sources. AM/FM radio can be played, as can music sourced from an iPod, CD, USB device or auxiliary input, but there’s no DAB option and wireless Bluetooth A2DP audio streaming is conspicuously absent.

Drive time

If Aston Martin designed the Virage to provide the performance thrills of the DBS without sacrificing the comfort and luxury of the DB9, then it’s succeeded.

On the one hand, it’s a snarling, aggressive beast of a car. Push the start button and its 490bhp, 6-litre V12 engine explodes into life, snorting angrily through an exhaust system that’s almost musical in its delivery. It goes like stink too — 0-62mph takes just 4.6 seconds and Aston Martin tells us it’ll keep pushing until it hits a top speed of 186mph.

As well as this sensational performance, you also get a fabulous sense of luxury. Sitting inside the cabin is like lazing around in a sofa that’s been contoured specifically for your bum. We spent days carving through the mountainous back roads of Andalusia, racking up hundreds of miles. Not once did driving this car become tiresome. The Virage eats up the miles like you wouldn’t believe — so much so that you could head out to the local shops and end up in a foreign country.

Twist and shout

The Virage’s exceptional comfort means it does sacrifice some of the raw-edged performance you’d expect from a supercar, such as its DBS cousin. The ride is softer and more forgiving, and the stodgy, occasionally ponderous gear changes — via the same Touchtronic II paddle-operated, seven-speed gearbox seen in the Rapide — aren’t befitting of a hard-as-nails racer.

That said, the Virage acquits itself admirably around twisty circuits. Throw it into sport mode and activate the harder suspension setting via dedicated buttons on the dashboard, and it’ll tackle twisty B roads with aplomb, slightly understeering only when provoked. The brakes, hewn from ventilated carbon ceramic rather than the more common and less efficient steel, scrub off speed at a fantastic rate.

Overall

The Aston Martin Virage is fabulously well-balanced. It’s easy to drive and luxurious, yet pushing this car to its limit is also very rewarding. It’s not as aggressive as the DBS or as soft as the DB9, but it’s arguably the most satisfying car to drive of the three.

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3 Responses to “Aston Martin Virage Coupe Review”

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