
I drove Aston Martin Vantage Roadster – it's car which cries out to be driven hard & will get you a nod of appreciation
Test an open-top Vantage dodging potholes in 20mph Great Britain.
4
Test an open-top Vantage dodging potholes at 20mph in the UK... or head to the Alps where roads are smooth, empty, and you can do much more than 20mph?
Credit: Aston Martin
4
This roadster is basically the mega Vantage coupe but with headroom of about 20,000 miles
Credit: Aston Martin
4
It's a car which cries out to be driven — and driven hard
Credit: Aston Martin
Or head to the Austrian Alps where the roads are smooth and empty and you can do a lot more than 20mph.
I went for option B.
The hills are alive with the sound of . . . a glorious V8.
A masterpiece of engineering in one of nature's great masterpieces.
READ MORE ON MOTORS
Not Coventry ring road.
Same 4-litre twin-turbo V8 sending 665 horses to the rear. And your ears.
Same suspension set-up.
Most read in Motors
Same 202mph top speed.
Just a tenth slower off the line. Because it's 60kg heavier.
Iconic Top Gear Aston Martin that Clarkson compared to 'lightning' hits auction
You won't be surprised to learn that driving it roof-down, on twisty mountain roads, turns everything up to 11.
The
power
. The torque. The noise. The razor-sharp steering. The handling. The way it makes you feel.
It's a car which cries out to be driven — and driven hard.
Yet equally, it's a car that's just as pleasing parked up outside a cafe.
Vantage Roadster or Porsche 911 Cabriolet?
You can make strong arguments for bothx of them.
Nod of appreciation
Let's just say many other sports cars/supercars are often greeted with the old Nescafe wave from other road users.
This car gets a nod of appreciation wherever it goes.
Because it's cool and sophisticated. And so very British.
As one might expect, the cabin fits like a tailored suit.
Copy-and-paste the regular Vantage. Except here the numbers in the driver's display are bigger and easier to read and there's an extra button on the flight deck of controls. For the roof. Duh.
By the way, the roof is eight layers thick, the motor is whisper-quiet, and it does the up/down sequence in just 6.8 seconds. It's an Aston Martin, darling. What do you expect?
Ignore the £175k price tag. By the time you've spent two days on the configurator it's going to be way more than that.
4
It's cool, classy, sophisticated - and so very British
Credit: Aston Martin
Now I should perhaps explain why I'm really in the Alps. James Bond author Ian Fleming went to school in Kitzbuhel.
Timothy Dalton's Bond drove a winterised Aston Martin on the southern Austrian border for The Living Daylights.
Now I should perhaps explain why I'm really tooling about in the Alps.
Any excuse, really.
Q&A: ASTON MARTIN CEO ADRIAN HALLMARK
FAST-forward to 2028 and Aston Martin will be killing it – as a car company, as a Formula 1 team, as a brand. I'm 100-per-cent certain.
Billionaire owner Lawrence Stroll doesn't do anything by half and he's recruited the biggest brains to make Aston world-beaters on and off the track.
Here's ten minutes inside the mind of Aston Martin CEO Adrian Hallmark, headhunted from Bentley last year to reinvent the car side of the business.
Who phoned who?
A mutual contact asked if I'd be interested in a conversation, which I agreed to because I was interested in the story.
So I had the conversation, understood the story, could see the credibility of what they'd done and what they were doing, and thought about it.
It wasn't a quick thing. It was a conversation over many, many months.
What was the deciding factor?
To prove if I could do it again. When I arrived at Bentley I was almost angry with the condition the company had got itself into having worked there before. I knew what it could be and had seen how Ferrari and others had developed.
Aston is another brand that has never realised its true potential. It was never really sustainably profitable. It was very niche. So the chance to do it one more time, as long as I'm feeling happy, healthy, fit and fully energised, what an opportunity.
Have you ever owned an Aston Martin?
Never. In fact, when I drove the Vantage, I almost felt a twinge of guilt. The performance and the quality and the feel of the Vantage is phenomenal. I'd never tried it because I always underestimated what it would be.
The whole philosophy at Bentley is super-fast but relaxed. In an Aston Martin, you feel energised. Every single one. The DB12 looks like an intercontinental cruiser. When you drive it, it's rampant, and feels really energetic and alive.
The Vantage is a step even further and Vanquish is another level. All very different characters, but they've all got this vitality in the way they feel and drive.
And they look the nuts . . . Honestly, you can't drive anywhere without being photographed. Everybody wants to talk to you about them and that's not just in the UK, that's when I'm in France or in Switzerland or travelling.
So what needs fixing?
To be really punchy about it, we were either unimaginative or self-limiting in assuming that we could launch a car for five years and take the top off it as the only action to keep the car relevant to customers.
If I buy a Vantage in 2023, I probably want to change it by 2025-2026.
So what's changed that allows me to come back and feel I'm buying a different and more attractive car than the one I'm already selling?
That's our duty and we've not planned enough of that. We're gonna do the exciting stuff as well. But the real key to building a sustainable profitable business is having this bedrock of products that work through this five, six-year life cycle where there's lots of innovation.
The luxury market has expanded exponentially over the past 20 years and we need to go and get our share.
We're covering a price range from £150,000 to £1million for the base cars. With the plans we've got to take each nameplate and express its full potential, do more specials but at the right cadence, I can see a clear pathway to making the brand sustainably profitable.
Talk to me about electrification . . . Step one is hybridisation. Beyond Valhalla, you'll start to see a complete hybridisation offer in parallel to some of the combustion offers that we have.
We will focus our hybrid approach on performance first and the emissions benefits will be the given.
We are still committed to full electric in the future. But we won't rush to change every model to electric one year after the next. We will launch something in this decade – but we won't have an offer in every body style by the end of this decade.
Will the first EV have four doors and a high hip-point?
More than likely.
An all-new model? Or will you use an existing name?
We've not made those decisions yet.
It's like babies, isn't it?
You have ideas before they are born but always do it after they are born.
Aston has always had James Bond. Now it has F1 too . . . I was jealous to death of James Bond, F1 and the specials business of Aston Martin when I was at Bentley.
Any one thing on its own is interesting. But if you look at the credibility and the integrity of what Lawrence is pulling together, I mean to get Adrian Newey, Enrico Cardile and Andy Cowell into the F1 team, this is not a vanity project. This is freaking serious. All-in.
For now, we've got to get through this season and it's all about 2026, 2027, 2028. That three-year window is what Lawrence and the whole team are absolutely obsessively focused on.
It coincides with where we should be as well. In the next few years we will have refreshed everything. Replaced everything. Not just the derivatives. Every car will be redone. You'll start to see a complete reset of the company both on track and off.
We've got the resources and the talent. Everything we need to get it done.
Last question – what's in your garage at home?
I don't collect cars. I'm a profligate consumer. I would never buy something just to own it. I buy it for the fun of the driving. I've got two G-Wagons, a 1991 Swiss Army eight-seater, and a G63. We've also got a Fiat 500 Electric for the city. It's beautiful. Satin grey, OZ Racing wheels.
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Leclerc take surprise pole for Ferrari in Budapest
Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took a surprise pole position for the Hungarian Grand Prix - as team-mate Lewis Hamilton could manage only 12th. Championship leader Oscar Piastri and title rival Lando Norris had been expected to fight for pole but the McLaren men were left to settle for second and third respectively. Leclerc saw off Piastri by just 0.026 seconds with Norris only 0.015 sec behind the Australian. George Russell finished fourth for Mercedes. McLaren had dominated all weekend at the Hungaroring with Norris fastest in both sessions on Friday, and Piastri - who leads his team-mate by 16 points in the world championship - quickest in the concluding running prior to qualifying. But Leclerc pulled a mighty lap out of the bag to secure both his and Ferrari's first pole of the season. The Monegasque said: "Today, I don't understand anything in Formula One. Honestly, the whole qualifying was extremely difficult. When I say extremely difficult, it's not exaggerating. "It was difficult for us to get to Q2, it was difficult for us to get to Q3. In Q3, the conditions changed a little bit. Everything became a lot trickier, and I knew I just had to do a clean lap to target third. "At the end of the day, it's pole position. I definitely did not expect that. Honestly, I have no words. It's probably one of the best pole positions I've ever had. It's the most unexpected, for sure." In the other scarlet car, Hamilton has a record eight wins and nine pole positions in Hungary. However, a week after he qualified only 16th at Spa-Francorchamps, he suffered another setback when he was knocked out of Q2. Hamilton has now been outqualified by Leclerc at 10 of the 14 rounds so far. "Every time, every time," said the British driver after he was informed of his early exit. Hamilton emerged from his cockpit and walked towards the Ferrari motorhome holding his gloves in front of his visor to obstruct the full glare of the waiting TV cameras. Hamilton's lowly grid slot looks set to extend his run without a podium finish to 14 races. Until this season he had never gone more than 10 races into a campaign without finishing in the top three. Hamilton's replacement at Mercedes, the teenager Kimi Antonelli, has only scored once in his last seven appearances and he too failed to make it out of Q2, qualifying 15th. Aston Martin have been woefully out of sorts this year and are eighth in the constructors' standings. Both Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll failed to make it out of Q1 at the previous round. However, Alonso - who turned 44 earlier this week - and Stroll progressed to the final phase on Saturday, and will start fifth and sixth respectively. Four-time world champion Max Verstappen qualified eighth for Red Bull. Alex Albon has enjoyed a strong season - he finished sixth last weekend - but he will line up from the back of the pack here after qualifying 20th and last. Yuki Tsunoda was also eliminated in Q1 for the fifth time this season, leaving him 16th on the grid.


The Irish Sun
5 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
‘I'm absolutely useless' – Lewis Hamilton says Ferrari ‘need to change driver' after Hungarian GP qualifying nightmare
LEWIS HAMILTON slammed himself as "useless" and told Ferrari to "CHANGE driver" after another nightmare qualifying saw him booted out in 12th. To make matters worse for the seven-time world champion his teammate Charles Leclerc bagged a shock pole position at the Hungaroring. Advertisement 5 Lewis Hamilton slammed himself as 'useless' Credit: PA 5 Hamilton told Ferrari to 'change driver' Credit: PA 5 Another nightmare qualifying saw him booted out in 12th Credit: Reuters Hamilton's Q2 exit comes after the British 40-year-old was axed all the way back in 18th in Q1 at the Belgian Grand Prix last time out. And today, Rookies Gabriel Bortoleto, Isack Hadjar and Ollie Bearman all finished ahead of the British 40-year-old in Hungary. Hamilton said 'Everytime, everytime.' on his team radio as the mechanics rolled his car back into the garage. He added: "It's me every time. I'm useless, absolutely useless. Advertisement READ MORE IN F1 "The team have no problem. You've seen the car's on pole so we probably need to change driver." Told his assessment is obviously not the case, Hamilton replied: "It clearly is. I just drove terribly. It is what it is." Hamilton has not finished on the podium after 13-races since his move to Ferrari this season, meanwhile his teammate Leclerc is 30-points above him in the driver's standings. Nobody saw it coming, the first pole of the year for Leclerc, 27, to stun second-place Oscar Piastri and third-place Lando Norris in their lightning quick McLarens. Advertisement Most read in Motorsport 5 CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS Leclerc's stunning lap threw a huge spanner in the works as McLaren had looked on course to line up one-two on the grid after the first two sessions. But soon they were left scratching their heads and blaming the wind, which in fairness flipped the final session on its head on the outskirts of Budapest. Advertisement Fears for F1 race with circuit damaged by raging storms as floodwater rips up part of the track Monegasque driver Leclerc even laughed when he was told on the team radio he secured pole, saying: "Whaaaaaaaaat?!" He added afterwards: 'Today I don't understand anything in Formula 1! Honestly, the whole qualifying has been extremely difficult. 'Honestly, I have no words. It's probably one of the best pole positions that I've ever had, because it's the most unexpected, for sure.' Piastri and Norris both blamed the wind, with the Brit saying: 'From how our form is, then of course (it's disappointing), but I think Charles did a good job on the last lap. Advertisement 'He probably risked a little bit more in these conditions. The wind changed a lot and it really seemed to punish us in a bigger way it seems.' Aussie driver Piastri added: "I think the wind changed a lot. It always sounds so pathetic, blaming things on the wind, but the wind basically did a 180 from Q1 to Q3.' There was more frustration for Mercedes as Italian 18-year-old Kimi Anontelli was out in Q2, having to settle for 15th on the grid for Sunday's race. Meanwhile, George Russell gave Toto Wolff's team a glimmer of hope, lining up in fourth-place on the grid for the race while Mac Verstappen who has been struggling all weekend came in eighth. Advertisement Red Bull's Yuki Tsundoa was the biggest casualty from the first session as he was eliminated in 16th. 5 Charles Leclerc bagged a shock pole position at the Hungaroring Credit: EPA


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Shock pole position for Ferrari as McLaren duo come up short in Hungary
Championship leader Oscar Piastri and title rival Lando Norris had been expected to fight for pole but the McLaren men were left to settle for second and third respectively. Leclerc saw off Piastri by just 0.026 seconds with Norris only 0.015 sec behind the Australian. George Russell finished fourth for Mercedes. McLaren had dominated all weekend at the Hungaroring with Norris fastest in both sessions on Friday, and Piastri – who leads his team-mate by 16 points in the world championship – quickest in the concluding running prior to qualifying. But Leclerc pulled a mighty lap out of the bag to secure both his and Ferrari's first pole of the season. The Monegasque said: 'Today, I don't understand anything in Formula One. Honestly, the whole qualifying was extremely difficult. When I say extremely difficult, it's not exaggerating. 'It was difficult for us to get to Q2, it was difficult for us to get to Q3. In Q3, the conditions changed a little bit. Everything became a lot trickier, and I knew I just had to do a clean lap to target third. 'At the end of the day, it's pole position. I definitely did not expect that. Honestly, I have no words. It's probably one of the best pole positions I've ever had. It's the most unexpected, for sure.' In the other scarlet car, Hamilton has a record eight wins and nine pole positions in Hungary. However, a week after he qualified only 16th at Spa-Francorchamps, he suffered another setback when he was knocked out of Q2. Hamilton has now been outqualified by Leclerc at 10 of the 14 rounds so far. 'Every time, every time,' said the British driver after he was informed of his early exit. Hamilton emerged from his cockpit and walked towards the Ferrari motorhome holding his gloves in front of his visor to obstruct the full glare of the waiting TV cameras. Hamilton's lowly grid slot looks set to extend his run without a podium finish to 14 races. Until this season he had never gone more than 10 races into a campaign without finishing in the top three. Hamilton's replacement at Mercedes, the teenager Kimi Antonelli, has only scored once in his last seven appearances and he too failed to make it out of Q2, qualifying 15th. Aston Martin have been woefully out of sorts this year and are eighth in the constructors' standings. Both Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll failed to make it out of Q1 at the previous round. However, Alonso – who turned 44 earlier this week – and Stroll progressed to the final phase on Saturday, and will start fifth and sixth respectively. Four-time world champion Max Verstappen qualified eighth for Red Bull. Alex Albon has enjoyed a strong season – he finished sixth last weekend – but he will line up from the back of the pack here after qualifying 20th and last. Yuki Tsunoda was also eliminated in Q1 for the fifth time this season, leaving him 16th on the grid.