BY ANDY ENRIGHT
Its not hard to see why the V8 Vantage has been such a massive success for Aston Martin. Just look at it. It remains one of the most perfectly proportioned cars available and its also a good bet as a used proposition, with better quality control at the high tech Gaydon plant. Sometimes the solution to a problem is so apparent with the benefit of hindsight that one wonders why it proved such a thorny issue in the first instance.
Take the Aston Martin V8 Vantage for instance. After launch, it was as clear as the nose on your face that Aston needed to be competing in this sector of the market with a car such as this, but for so long talk of a baby Aston only brought howls that such a move would erode the brands reputation. The DB7 was a good first step but still felt slightly homespun. The V8 Vantage is the real deal and used examples are currently hot property.
| Build | ![]() |
| Comfort | ![]() |
| Depreciation | ![]() |
| Economy | ![]() |
| Equipment | ![]() |
| Handling | ![]() |
| Insurance | ![]() |
| Performance | ![]() |
| Styling | ![]() |
| Value | ![]() |
Taking the decision to ditch vestigial rear seats and optimise space for driver and passenger meant that theres enough head and leg room for six-footers, while the width of the cabin and the broad transmission tunnel will make banging elbows a distant memory. With high quality leather seats, a stubby gear lever and drilled pedals, the V8 Vantages cockpit is certainly purposeful, a word that crops up again and again in any description of the car. Although the basic body silhouette is instantly recognisable as an Aston Martin, the V8 Vantage is over a foot shorter than a DB9 and 60mm lower slung. Put the two cars side by side and the DB9 is revealed as the GT car it is, while the Vantage sits foursquare, the big rear wheel arch bulges lending it a pugnacious muscularity.
Rather than attempt to fit a folding metal hard top and risk ruining the cars lines, Aston Martin wisely chose to fit a plush three-layer fabric hood to the Vantage Roadster model. With the hood up, the Vantage still looks elegantly proportioned, the hood forming a neat turret without the overly long rear deck that some convertible suffer from. With the hood stowed, there are a pair of what Aston refers to as leather speed humps that sit behind the seat head restraints and pyrotechnic roll over bars. Aston Martin claim a minimal weight increase over the Vantage coupe, the suggestion being that the inherent stiffness of the aluminium chassis means theres no need for the sort of extensive cross-bracing that many convertible cars require to maintain rigidity.
Such added ironmongery adds weight, blunts performance and reduces fuel economy. The exterior panels are a combination of aluminium, steel and advanced composites designed to keep weight down, and even the 1,710kg kerb weight is a mere 60kg more than a Porsche Carrera 4S Targa but a lot lighter than the 2005kg BMW M6 Convertible.
Aston Martin found itself in the privileged position of ramping up V8 Vantage production significantly whilst simultaneously seeing queues for orders getting longer. Demand for the car has exceeded even the companys most optimistic forecasts and the reasons are easy to appreciate. It looks great, sounds even better, is acceptably rapid and has an interior that is better than many cars twice its price. Factor in a decent reliability record and thats all thats needed.
Used prices reflect this and although the book value of a 55-plated coupe currently stands at £73,000, it may take some scratching around to find one in a dealer for that sort of money.
As much as anything, getting the right specification for your V8 Vantage is key. This includes the xenon headlights, the premium sound system and the desirable 19-inch alloy wheels. The satellite navigation will also sound good to prospective buyers despite hardly being the most functional system of its ilk. 2006 model year cars were reputed to have some minor electrical issues (earth grounding, door module and tail lights remaining illuminated) but these have since been ironed out.
Some rattles from behind the dash are frequently reported and the plastic engine covers can come loose and melt onto the exhaust manifold but other than these niggles, no serious faults have been reported. Muted colours such as black, grey and British Racing Green suit the V8 Vantage better than gaudy primaries.
(approx based on a 2005 V8 Vantage coupe) Most services will cost around £700 with the big expense of any enthusiastically driven V8 Vantage being rear tyres. The rears are usually sourced at around £400 a pair although prices can vary. Brakes also take a hammering with pads being around £250 a pair.
The key to the V8 Vantage is the modular VH platform it rides on. Its a mixture of extruded, stamped and die-cast aluminium, bonded together into an extremely light yet rigid superstructure. The exterior panels are a combination of aluminium, steel and advanced composites designed to keep weight down to 1,570kg which is about the same as a BMW M3. With a 380bhp engine under the bonnet, performance is certainly class competitive, hitting 60mph in 4.
8 seconds and accelerating to a top speed of 175mph. Those figures put it in the same sort of ballpark as a Porsche Carrera S, if not a Turbo. With a relatively large 4.3-litre eight cylinder engine up front, weight distribution was a priority for Aston Martins engineers.
A transmission at the rear of the car helps generate a 49:51 weight distribution front and rear, the engine being what is fashionably termed front-mid mounted or, in laymans terms, with its centre of gravity set behind the line of the front axle. All of this helps the Vantage V8 corner nimbly, and predictably. A dry sump also allows the engine to sit very low in the chassis, lowering the cars centre of gravity to help stability. During periods of extreme cornering, acceleration and braking, this system also helps to maintain an uninterrupted flow of oil to crucial engine components.
The quad cam 32-valve engine itself is hand assembled in Cologne.
The Aston Martin V8 Vantage is the least risky Aston purchase ever. If that means that the marque has become a little more mainstream, sales figures indicate its a strategy that many owners accept and welcome. As a used buy, go for as late a model as you can reasonably afford and, counter to many exotic car purchases, dont be overly worried about a few miles on the clock.
Aston Martin V8 Vantage (2005 - To Date)
















