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For some time now I’ve been a worried man. It was obvious from the photographs
that Aston Martin’s new DB9 would be pretty, but would it be the epitome of
Britishness? Would it be a steel and wooden fist in a leather glove? Would
it be an Aston Martin?
The evidence didn’t look good. The factory these days looks like a UN
convention. It’s owned by the Americans, the chief stylist is Danish,
there’s a Japanese peacekeeper, a token woman and the big cheese is a German
doctor called Ulrich Bez.
He popped round for coffee this morning to try to allay my fears but, to begin
with, did no such thing. For half an hour he talked in microscopic detail
about how the car is built. I learnt how everything from the firewall
backwards is glued together using a Norwegian system, and how the front is
held on with bolts. I learnt about the composition of every single panel and
I thought, oh no. I’m going to be here until I die.
He wasn’t finished. For the next half hour I had a lecture on the gearbox.
Unlike the “Wankwish” — that’s what he calls the Vanquish — the paddles
behind the steering wheel operate an automatic box rather than a manual.
This is better, he says, because with the Wankwish system you have to
concentrate all the time on changing gear. If you do not, the gearbox
breaks.
Then we got to the engine and I needed more coffee to stay awake. It is the
same 6 litre V12 that you get in the Wankwish but the UN delegation from
Botswana has fiddled with the on-board computer to make it a little more
relaxed. Naturally, Bez gave me chapter and verse on all the hows and whys.
This is the problem with the Germans. They like to analyse, with flip charts,
every single detail of every single part of the car. That’s fine, but there
is a downside, which is plain for all to see on the new 6-series BMW. It’s
as boring as hell.
Advertising men will tell you that when it comes to cars they need to attach a
single word to the brand. So if you want a “safe” car you buy a Volvo. If
you want a “reliable” car, you buy a Volkswagen. And if you have a small
“penis” you buy a BMW.
It’s not just brands either. There are single words that describe the national
characteristics of a car too. A German car is “engineered”. A French car is
“soft” and an Italian car is “exuberant”.
I’ve always felt that a British car is “traditional”. We, as a nation, don’t
like change. When the submarine was invented, for instance, the navy top
brass dismissed it as “underhand and ungentlemanly” and we see the same sort
of thing with our cars. They all hark back to the Blower Bentley, which set
the scene by being big, heavy, powerful and green.
Everything from the Bristol to the Allegro Vanden Plas and from the old Aston
Vantage to the Jaguar XJ6 looked like a Spitfire from the outside and a
Harvester pub on the inside. Lots of dark colours, lots of heavy wood and
very little natural light. Given half a chance the British car designer
would fit an open fire instead of a heater, and some horse brasses.
“Pah,” said Bez. “Of course tourists still come here to see the Queen and the
changing of the guard but the country has changed. You’ve got the London
Symphony Orchestra and Gieves & Hawkes. What they are doing now is not
what they were doing 10 years ago.”
He says that the tradition in Britain is for discipline. “You can see this
with your armed forces” — he’d know — “but discipline isn’t enough now. Look
at your football team. You can discipline them all you like but you need
creativity and flair as well. That’s what David Beckham brings.” Again,
after the 5-1 drubbing, he’d know about that too.
But still, I was alarmed. Because he was arguing that the DB9 should be like
Tate Modern, which I think is as British as a coffee shop in Zurich. Pale
woods, neat design and zinc are European, which is fine if you’re making
furniture, but it’s not British. It’s not spotted dick and big thick
custard. It’s not the library at Blenheim Palace. Heavy, dark, and a bit
damp.
Eventually we ended the discussion and I was taken outside to see the car.
It’s not as pretty or as dainty as the old DB7, but even so it’s still
agonisingly, knee-tremblingly, good looking. Let me put it this way. The DB7
was like Liz Hurley. Classically good looking in a feminine sort of way. The
DB9 is more like George Clooney.
Then I opened the door and relief washed over me like waves on a Caribbean
shore. The dash, the carpets and the seats were finished in what can only be
described as placenta red. It didn’t go at all with the wood and the metal.
Joy of joys. It was still like a pub in there, and not an airport departure
lounge.
Better still, the controls for the electric seats look like I’d made them and
the power steering pump juddered as I turned the wheel. Bez had a terribly
British excuse for this. “Oh they all do that,” he said. But he said it in
such a way that I suspect the man responsible has been shot.
He also suggested that there will be no judder on the cars people actually
buy, and pointed out you don’t have to have an interior the colour of an
afterbirth.
So I turned the key, pressed the starter, pushed a button to engage drive, set
off, and on the first corner knew, with absolute certainty, I was in an
Aston.
When you turn the wheel in a Ferrari it communicates with the front tyres
using telepathy. The whole car lets you know that it could flow from bend to
bend whether you were there or not. In the DB9, however, you are made to
feel like part of the equation. You have to manhandle the nose into the
apex, so when you kiss it perfectly, and you will, because this car handles
like a dream, you feel like it was all down to you. That makes you feel
good.
Coming out of the corner you floor the throttle and the exhaust makes a
perfectly judged snarl as 450bhp hits the gearbox, which is mounted at the
back for better weight distribution. It’s not so loud that it’s wearing, but
not so quiet that you think you’ve bought a washing machine by mistake.
The ride also strikes a perfect balance.
A 20-year-old would say it’s too soft. A 70-year-old would say it’s too hard.
But for the fortysomethings who’ll actually buy the thing, it steers a Radio
2 course right down the middle.
You can feel, when you push, the outside rear wheel scrabbling for grip — you
really can feel it through your trousers — but when you fly over a crest on
a British B-road, the nose does not smash into the tarmac with a sickening
thud.
And boy oh boy is it fast. The figures say it will go from 0 to 60 in 4.9sec
and on to a top speed of 186, but actually, as you snarl and roar through
the countryside, it feels even faster than that.
Once, I was given the controls of a world war two P51 fighter. That thing
danced and jinked like no machine I’d ever been in, and all the time there
was a glorious roar from the Merlin engine. Well, that’s what the DB9 feels
like. Like a fighter. Like everything mankind knows about excitement and
machinery and technology has finally come together in an orgasm of absolute,
thrilling and total harmony.
And yet. Inside you have a Volvo satellite navigation system that works, you
have a stereo system which looks and sounds as good as anything from Quad,
and you have space to move too. The back’s a bit cramped, even if you’re
Douglas Bader, but the front is massive.
So Bez — may God smile on him and all his family — has done it. He’s kept the
traditional qualities of a British car but blended them with German
engineering to create a party in the park. An old fashioned setting, but a
whole new sound.
As a result he’s ended up with a car for which only one word will do. If
you want a “fast” car, buy a Ferrari. If you want a “Volkswagen”, buy a
Bentley Continental GT.
If you want a “perfect” car, you simply have to have a DB9.
VITAL STATISTICS
Model: Aston Martin DB9
Engine type: V12, 5935cc
Power: 450bhp @ 6000rpm
Torque: 420lb ft @ 5000rpm
Transmission: Six-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Suspension: Independent coil springs, double wishbones, anti-roll bar
Tyres: (front) 235/40 ZR 19 (rear) 275/35 ZR 19
Fuel: 17.1mpg (combined)
Acceleration: 0-60mph: 4.9sec
Top speed: 186mph-plus
Price: £103,000
Verdict: The union of everything man knows about technology, machinery
and excitement... with a pub interior
Rating: 5/5 stars