Review: Aston Martin DBS Carbon Black devours suns, spits them out
#1
Review: Aston Martin DBS Carbon Black devours suns, spits them out
Review: Aston Martin DBS Carbon Black devours suns, spits them out
We'll admit right now that we have never been completely taken with the Aston Martin DBS. It wasn't that we didn't like it – on the contrary, it's every bit the fabulous car. It's just that we found the DBS slightly... too much, in the same way you could have too much pampering or too much caviar. Even as you're finding the words to decline the next round of Beluga you're thinking, "Wow, I can't believe I'm about to give this the stiffarm, but..." It's all about the fact that the DB9, to our eyes, is just right. The DB9 needs nothing added, and as fabulous as the DBS is, it marks the addition of that not-needed something.
Then the DBS Carbon Black came for a visit, so you can consider this our about-face: The DBS – or rather, this DBS – is our first choice in Astons, so much so that we'd only look at the others after driving this one into some shallow, oily grave.
It pains us to sound so worn-out, and you can take consolation in the fact that we aren't trying to sweet-talk you into a Cadillac Cimmaron we're flogging on AutoTrader, but the Aston Martin DBS Carbon Black looks worlds better in person. More accurately, it looks better than you'd ever guess from its press shots, where oddball lighting and even odder CGI and Photoshopping killed the car's blackness – which kinda kills the whole point of coming to the party.
Parked before you, its high-strength steel drenched in Carbon Black paint and accented with brightwork and carbon fiber, takes its place as the first OED definition of "Blacked-out." It is everything an ebony car should be: low, wide, and terribly, awfully, gloriously black. The coupe devours so many photons that the sun might even appear to rise a little later and set a little earlier. If, as a scientific experiment, you wore all black while you drove the car, scientists' fears of an Earth-based black hole would come true and you'd most likely disrupt the time-space continuum in ways that physics doesn't yet have words to describe. You could conceivably find the Planet of the Apes. Yes, this is a frighteningly black car.
It's the eating of all those visible light waves that puts the DBS Carbon Black at the top for us, because it swallows the bodywork lines and other details that highlight the structure underneath. The resulting smoothness renders it no longer a DB9 with add-ons, but a single and whole car with a sinister line from which your eye extracts the vicious highlights: the width of the grille, the front lamps in their elongated recesses, the Magnum Silver mesh-covered ducts in the hood, the lone bit of light that manages to live on the horizontal surfaces of the car's wider rear fenders, the carbon fiber filaments supporting the mirrors. All of it. And it gets better.
Even the wheels earned our applause, which was another reversal since we weren't fans of them in the stock shots. Placed in the three-dimensional world, though, the 20-inch, ten-spoke diamond-turned wheels with a graphite finish regain all of their dimensions. They aren't flat at all, with five sets of dual spokes fingering up and out from the hub and increasing in thickness, ultimately latching onto gloss black rims.
Enjoying the ocular meal every time we approached the car, it just made us want to say, "Can I get an amen?"
Inside it's an Aston – and we all know what that means by now – but with a few thoughtful touches. The semi-aniline leather and Alcantara, piano black decor with matrix alloy trim and carbon fiber door trim and pulls all conspire to add more flavor to the inside. The seats are also fashioned from the fibrous stuff, and then wrapped in cross-stitched Obsidian Black leather. They save 37 pounds while maintaining full-fat comfort; we drove the car from LA to San Francisco and suffered nary an ache. We haven't met an Aston driving position that we didn't like, and the DBS keeps up with its siblings as far as that goes – the driver's seat is the perfect cubicle in which to do a day's work.
Which brings us to the first of three special points we noticed about the interior. This model was a 2+2, with two optional items behind the front thrones that were referred to as "back seats." Half of that expression (hint: the first word) is true. If you had a really small baby in a really small chair it might fit in the really small back. But you'll have a hard time getting the seat in the car as the baby will know you're installing him in Aston Martin's equivalent of "The Hole" in a supermax prison. You could move the driver's seat forward, but then the cockpit isn't perfect perfection anymore. Or you could omit that back "seat" option and save yourself $3,785 dollars. It's not like you're worried about money, but that's more than the cost of the carbon black treatment itself, which only rings the till up for $2,720. Instead, get the stitched leather and two-bottle champagne holster that drapes over the rear tunnel. A much better use of that area.
The other note, pun intended, was the 13-speaker, 1,000-watt Bang & Olufsen stereo. Even mass-market premium cars are coming with some excellent audio equipment – Mercedes has Harmon-Kardon and Jaguar has Bowers & Wilkins, for instance – but this system is more phenomenal than you'd expect. Rear speaker placement is tough in coupes, even if they have just enough space in back to not have seats, the effect of which puts you in a pure two-seater as far as sound goes. All the noise comes from the front and playing with the balance and fader usually just muddies things up.
Not so here. One thousand watts is a thoroughly unnecessary number best used for "Whip it out" contests and destroying your auditory canals, but B&O uses those watts wisely at all volumes. The proper sound, crisp and full, envelops the cabin properly. Sonic reproduction from CDs is outstanding, and B&O has found a way to make your average bitrate iTunes music sound so good that someone from Apple should write a 'Thank You' note to the Danish company every time you plug in your iPod. Even better, it appears that Aston has updated its iPod integration software, making the trek through artists and playlists much more easy than it used to be.
The third point is this: An Aston cabin is a beautiful thing and simple to use. Even the navigation system, which has also had an interface update, was a piece of proverbial bread pudding. Although we will toast the day the company jettisons the plastic doorjamb of a nav unit, it's not like we ever even used it. Due to that intergalactic blackness, clocks stopped wherever we went so we never had to worry about being late.
Besides, we had nowhere to be but behind the wheel burning gas. Destinations were optional. Place the Emotion Control Unit in the slot (translation: key fob) and hold it there while the car clears its pipes. But be warned about that start-up: You will wake your light-sleeping neighbors on a typical residential street. No matter, though, you're now the master of a mighty machine.
The car comes standard with a six-speed manual, which is our preference even in Los Angeles, but this car had the six-speed Touchtronic 2 automatic. We are nominally not fans of paddle-shifters, but the Aston variant is excellent. We signed up for the Touchtronic 2 fan club last year after driving the DBS Volante in Pebble Beach, and there is still a rainbow that ends at a pot of gold in the tranny's bell housing. Shifts up and down are utterly seamless and damn-near instant; the psycho-electro-mechanical idea of shifting that has to travel from your brain to your flexing fingertips is the only hold-up in the equation.
But before you get to a shift, you must take off from a standstill, and that opens the door to another aspect of the unique Aston experience: The DBS is a performer, but there is almost nothing jarring about it – nearly everything happens within an envelope just short of disturbing. The 6.0-liter V12 rumbles with 510 horsepower and 420 pound-feet of torque, the rear-wheel beneficiaries of that potentiality pushing the 3,767-pound coupe from zero to 60 miles per hour in 4.3 seconds. That's the same as a PDK-equipped, 3,161-pound Porsche 911 Carrera S, but it doesn't exactly feel it. Load up on the carbon disc brakes, 15.7-inch rotors up front with six-piston calipers, and you'll decelerate in quadruple-time, but it only feels like double-time.
Hit the gas again and the exhaust signals its approval. That evolves into a throaty wail when the bypass opens up at 4,000 rpm, but still, it never gets overbearing. (Nor does it get old.) It's just enough. You can putter around town, you can set the cruise at near triple digits and enjoy the sounds of the car or the sound system, or you can point-and-shoot from turn-to-turn and have more fun than you ever would with a Canon.
Even though that brings us to the only jarring aspect of the car: It's as stiff as Marble Arch. The steering was brilliant – we could point and place the car practically by thought. If the road was smooth as cream, we owned it. Owned. If the road wasn't, as LA's canyon roads tend not to be, the car did a stutter-step through every turn. Even the Adaptive Damping System couldn't overcome the DBS' skittishness. Having worked our way from smooth twisties to bumpy, at first we couldn't figure out where the DBS' immaculate manners went, especially when we remembered driving the DBS Volante last summer on a pockmarked Carmel Valley Road and being chuffed by its agility.
Then we remembered Senior Editor Lavrinc's review of the 2009 Aston Martin V8 Vantage, wherein he regretted that the coupe was so stiff that he'd choose the convertible without the twist-minimizing Sport Pack. We would still take the DBS coupe just because that's how we roll, even though it doesn't have a Sport Pack option that we could un-check. But we'd miss the Volante when it came time to manhandle any esses that featured irregular road surfaces. But let's keep things in context – the DBS is fantastic even when it's letting you know how unyielding it is. But the mere fact that it's unyielding in that one instance, when otherwise it's a pile of Carbon and Obsidian Black warm fuzzies, makes that one instance stand out.
No matter, for $283,350 we'd take it immediately. Get rid of the back "seat" and we could even get the price below an even $280K – not that our wealth management team would care about that trifle. Nor would it care that we'd probably turn right around and spend that money on a larger gas tank, since the 12/18 EPA numbers work to keep the 20.5-gallon unit regularly free of octane. Again, no matter. Piety is a priceless affair, and we found the DBS Carbon Black the motoring equivalent of The Lord's Prayer: a reverent way to worship the act of driving, and an everyday reason to intone, "Amen."
Gallery:
http://www.autoblog.com/photos/revie...-carbon-black/
http://www.autoblog.com/2010/05/03/a...-black-review/
Trending Topics
#11
Lexus Champion
Wow, everytime I see this car, i just get chills remembering the beginning of the latest Bond movie, Quantum Of Solace! This is the best Aston road car in terms of looks there is. I wish they made it for us who aren't so fortunate, it'd be on my top list for sure. This, the LFA, and the 599 GTO are my top 3 right now.
#12
Pole Position
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Lake Country, WI
Posts: 2,794
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
For me, the only car I've ever seen that each time I look at it, what I liked the first time improves that much more PLUS I see something new... EVERY time
Automotive nirvana... if only it wasn't $283K... but that just adds to its aura...
Automotive nirvana... if only it wasn't $283K... but that just adds to its aura...