
Low, Long, and Languid Make For Bentley at Its Best
The big(ish) news here among the assembled non-Bentaygas is that hybrid V-8s now power the entirety of the
Continental GT
and
Flying Spur
ranges, tuned to varying horsepower and torque figures based on trim, but always with at least 670 horsepower and 685 pound-feet.
Bentley insists this streamlining is a benefit, that its customers don't miss the hallowed W-12 engine which used to power the big bruisers in its portfolio. Proof is in the sales, they contend. W-12 purchases tailed off toward the end of the engine's production run, while these subsequent V-8 Hybrids have proven massively popular, contributing massively to Bentley's position as Volkswagen Group's cash cow.
Photo by: Kyle Kinard / Motor1
More importantly, the cars prove the point about hybrid V-8s themselves: This powertrain sounds great and drives beautifully. I'll call it perhaps the most-refined hybrid powertrain on earth. As an engineering curiosity and connection to Bentley history, the W-12 can't be replaced. From the driver's perspective, the V-8 hybrid ensures the outgoing W-12 won't be missed.
In slow-moving residential areas surrounding the resort, the kick of hybrid torque eases each Bentley effortlessly up short, punchy climbs without a single extra iota of strain from the drivetrain. No kicking down two or three gears when you squeeze the gas pedal, interrupting the sensation you're rolling along on a breeze. Instead, there's simply silent, effortless, assured propulsion from the hybrid motor.
So often, hybrids are masterful partners for economy cars but rarely improve sports or luxury cars. These Bentleys provide an exception to the rule.
A hybrid lineup isn't much to write home (or to readers) about, but I was overcome by the overwhelming Bentley-ness of both cars I tested. After a 45-minute rip in the Continental GTC, I simply scribbled superlatives in my notebook.
Photo by: Kyle Kinard / Motor1
"This is a ****** Bentley, baby," I wrote. "Like putting on a diamond necklace."
Now, I don't actually know what it feels like to don a diamond necklace, probably because I'm bound by the stolid shackles of masculinity. (Also I can't afford to browse at Tiffany, so let's go with the shackles). But if you're spending the cost of a nice Midwestern home on a form of transportation, maybe a diamond necklace on wheels is the sort of hyperbolic emotion worth wheeling out of your driveway.
That's all to say: I can get my stealth wealth hit from the back seat of a Genesis G90 or an S-Class on 19s; We look to Crewe to deliver something of such sublime quality and style that it stirs us emotionally.
So, first up, the Flying Spur Touring. Nice name to say. Green roof over striking silver body, the paint blends so seamlessly that your fingernail can't tell where one layer begins and another ends.
Photo by: Bentley
This is classic Bentley, long and low and made of boxy shapes that seem to be sanded down so perfectly at the edges, you imagine water dripping off the thing even when it's sat under Montana's cobalt sky. However you look at it, the Flying Spur is breathtaking.
As much as I enjoyed the Bentayga Speed and its vast capabilities, the Flying Spur is simply the Bentley closest to my heart. I suppose it's impossible to explain—though I'll try—but with the Bentleys that ride closer to the ground instead of parading around like The Mayor of Monaco on 23-inch wheels—well, there's just something a bit more… Bentley about a Flying Spur. Some restraint.
"A whiff of Gentry about this one," I scribbled into my notebook following that wafty little stint in the Flying Spur.
Photo by: Bentley
What does that actually mean? Well, the Flying Spur's drivetrain doesn't punch theatrically at your backside when its transmission shifts during a flat-foot quarter-mile blast, unlike the Bentayga's mill. The Spur's hybrid system simply smears the gear shifts together like a swipe of warm honey down your back while the engine note boils over gruffly on a swell of syrupy, easy mega-torque.
And perhaps it's just how this Flying Spur was spec'd by Bentley, but there's a stateliness to the Flying Spur's interior that fits better with my own preconceptions of the Bentley namesake. The 'Cumbrian Green' leather is laid across the Spur's interior by the yard, swathing the interior in a shade of avocado-skin that feels at once rich, luxuriant, and assured in its stateliness.
You imagine a new life from behind the wheel of a Flying Spur. This one is full of tartan-lined waxed cotton jackets and maybe a Labrador riding shotgun.
The vast leather surfaces are broken only by white contrast stitching and a walnut veneer stretching across the lower dash and center console. This dash layout looks slightly outdated compared to the Bentayga, but it just fits the Flying Spur.
Photo by: Kyle Kinard / Motor1
Also of note: Bentley's new "Azure" trim. Azure is a styling package, essentially, sat above the base model in terms of cost and prestige. It's meant to evoke a more easygoing yet overtly luxurious tone compared to the 'Speed' trim we sampled in the Bentayga on day one. 'Azure' arrives with a not-insignificant bump in bling, converting the exterior trim to mirror-polish brightwork and slapping a pair of silver wheels on the whole thing.
Bentley's GT/C Azure convertible cranks the luxury up another notch, but in a sort of fresh, new-age way. If the Spur is a musty sort of throwback to British coachmaking's golden age, the Azure is new luxury; It attends kombucha-ayahuasca wellness retreats in Sonoma with the other girlbosses and gets there by private chopper.
Photo by: Kyle Kinard / Motor1
You see that attitude throughout the interior of this blue-on-silver beauty. The leather quality and quantity match the Flying Spur's, but the Azure renders its interior in cooler shades, evoking a yacht's sleek ease.
But then there's the diamond-pattern stitching holding each leather panel together, the visual depth of the beautifully painted trim pieces running along the dash, and in general, the way this interior looks like it's sitting inside a jeweler's glass display case. This is a beautiful interior, and I can't honestly say that about almost any modern car.
Photo by: Kyle Kinard / Motor1
While more and more customers go to Bentley for their SUVs, I find that Bentley's cars offer a purer expression of the brand's traditional ideals. Even if you ultimately walk out of the showroom with a Bentayga's keys in your pocket, you owe it to yourself to consider the alternatives.
Share this Story
X
Got a tip for us? Email:
tips@motor1.com
Join the conversation
(
)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
5 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Deep Reads: Chasing ghosts with Dale Earnhardt Jr.
In October 2023, Junior turned 49. That's the same age his dad was in 2001, when, before the last turn on the last lap of the Daytona 500, Dale Earnhardt Sr.'s car bumped into Sterling Marlin's, sending the iconic No. 3 careening into the wall at 160 mph. Reporter Kent Babb was studying journalism in college in 2002 when his grandmother called. 'They think he's gone,' she said, referring to Babb's father. His father's heart had become enlarged, and while he was painting a house one day, it just stopped. His dad was 51. Babb is 43 now, and since the day his dad died, there has been something unsettling to him about the idea of turning 51. This is common among people who've lost a parent young, or what is called an 'off-time' death. Psychologists suggest these feelings of anxiety and fear, alongside a gradually intensifying urge to learn about your bloodline, are like a final stage of grief. And it's one that most people, and in particular men, rarely talk about or explore. Babb wanted to talk about it, preferably with someone who understood. And though he never took to NASCAR, Babb knew he and Junior belonged to the same unfortunate club. Babb wondered if he thought about it, if he dreaded turning 49, how he was coping as he approached the age his daddy was. So, before his birthday in 2023, Babb asked if Earnhardt Jr. would be open to talking. He said yes. This story traces Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s relationship with his father and who he has become after his father's death. Kent Babb reported, wrote and narrated the piece. Bishop Sand composed music and produced audio for the piece. Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

Associated Press
8 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Denny Hamlin's 2-year contract extension with Joe Gibbs Racing could be his last in Cup series
Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Denny Hamlin never wanted to drive for a team other than Joe Gibbs Racing. A two-year contract extension may seal the deal. On Friday, five days after winning his 58th Cup race, the 44-year-old Hamlin signed what he said would likely be his final contract extension. JGR officials only said the deal was for 'multiple' years, though Hamlin noted he didn't want anything longer than two years. 'Two years is what I was comfortable with,' he said. 'I wanted to make sure I gave them the proper time and make sure I commit to them for not one year but multiple years, to let them try to continue to build the program. I want to make sure I'm still at my peak form in my final year.' There's no indication Hamlin is slowing down. He owns a series best four wins this season and has the top points total, 663, outside the Hendrick Motorsports stable. Only Chase Elliott, William Byron and Kyle Larson enter the weekend with more points. A win in Sunday's Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway would allow Hamlin to complete a career sweep of NASCAR's crown jewel races. He's already won three Daytona 500s, three Southern 500s and one Coca-Cola 600. 'Adding another crown jewel would be big and then to have swept them all,' said Hamlin, who will make his 17th career Indy start. 'I mean certainly the names are very, very prestigious on that list, so it would certainly mean a lot to me. It would be just another feather in the cap.' Hamlin has done just about everything else since his first race in 2005 — except win a series title. With 706 career starts, all with JGR, he's the longest tenured driver in team history even though he missed one race this year after the birth of his first son and third child. He ranks 11th on the Cup's career victory list. He also owns 244 top-five finishes, 369 top-10s and has won the pole 44 times. He and NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan even co-own NASCAR's 23XI Racing team, which fields cars for Bubba Wallace, Riley Herbst and Tyler Reddick. Hamlin's team and Front Row Motorsports are locked in a legal battle over antitrust allegations against NASCAR. 'He's very, very high racing IQ,' Reddick said, describing Hamlin. 'I feel like the last couple of years he's done more sharing of that with everybody, with the platforms he uses. For me, he's really helped me understand short track racing. I feel like between him (Hamlin) and Bubba, they helped me better understand what to look for in my car.' And yet, Hamlin also acknowledged he's not really ready to retire yet and he might not be in two years, either. Instead, he wants to see how it feels to be out of the driver's seat, knowing comebacks in this sport happen routinely. Should he have second thoughts, he might even return to JGR. 'I really appreciate Denny and everything he has meant to our organization,' Gibbs said in a statement. 'It is just really special when you think about everything we've experienced over the past 20 years, from that first moment when J.D. (Gibbs) recognized his talent at a test session, until now. It is remarkable in any sport to compete at the level Denny has for this long and we are thrilled he has been able to spend his entire career with us.' But Hamlin's decision also came down to more than sentiment. 'I'd kind of like to see where I'm at two years from now, where the team's at, what's their Plan B, where they are with that and then just how competitive I am, how good do I feel how much and how bad do I want it,' Hamlin said. 'All those things are big, big, big factors in it. But I just want the ability to know I can win my last race. That's the deciding factor.' ___ AP auto racing:
Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
I-485 outer closed in west Charlotte due to serious fatal crash: Medic
CHARLOTTE (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — The I-485 outer loop is closed in west Charlotte due to a fatal crash, according to Medic. Traffic officials said the wreck was reported around 11:40 a.m. on Saturday near Exit 9 on I-485. Medic confirmed this is a serious accident with multiple patients, at least one of whom has died. 🚗 Track issues along your commute with the QCN Traffic Interactive Map The roadway will be closed for an extended time as officials investigate and clear the crash. NCDOT expects I-485 to reopen around 2:30 p.m. on Saturday. As a detour, drivers can take Exit 10A to I-85 North, then take Exit 38 to I-77 South, and then back onto I-485. Police have not said what led to the crash or if any charges will be 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.