Aston Martin Cygnet V8 Specs
Aston Martin Cygnet V8 Specs
Wheel-arch extensions cover a dramatically expanded track, but the other bodywork has barely changed, with only slight modifications to the front and rear bumpers.
What's the V8 Cygnet like to drive?
On the road, it's much less compromised than it should be. The new bulkhead location has created an offset driving position, with the pedals sitting in what soon turns out to be an angle-cricking position.
With the V8 engine crammed in, the Cygnet has become a strict two-seater, having a pair of Recaro buckets in place of the original four-seat layout. The interior features lots of carbonfibre trim, including on the dashboard and door cards. Plus, it has gained Vantage instruments and Aston's trademark R/N/D gearshift buttons in a neat dashboard binnacle, whereas the standard Cygnet made do with a Toyota shifter.
There's even a traditional Aston fly-off handbrake, albeit between the seats rather than mounted next to the door.
The snarling soundtrack is barely silenced V8, but the heads it turns are soon wearing looks of incredulity at the sight of the steroidal Cygnet that's the unlikely source of the commotion.
Performance feels strong: Aston says that the Cygnet would have the legs on the Vantage in a straight drag race, because its 250kg-lighter kerbweight gives it a 0-60mph time of 4.2sec. You'd need to have swallowed a handful of brave pills to get anywhere near the quoted 170mph top speed, though.
Acceleration feels forceful and the dynamic cues are very similar to the donor Vantage, with similarly weighted steering and a nicely proportional throttle response. The gearbox is snappier and less well-mannered than it was in the Vantage S; the development team admit that persuading it to work in the shorter, lighter Cygnet was one of the biggest challenges, and it gets confused if instruction through the steering wheel-mounted paddles is delivered too quickly.
The ride is firm, sometimes uncomfortably so on rougher surfaces, but the Cygnet feels impressively stable considering the relative size of its wheelbase and its track.
There's no traction or stability control, apparently at the owner's request, with overlapping throttle and a big steering input provoking the lightening sensation of an impending slide – not something to be investigated further without some serious run-off.
The car feels more stable under braking than you would expect, given that some of those who drove it at Goodwood reported some twitchiness under big stops, but under even enthusiastic road use it pulls up without the need for steering intervention. The hardest thing to get used to on normal roads is the difference between the apparent width of the cabin and how far out the wheels actually are.
It's no surprise to report that the V8 Cygnet is always loud, and, despite the best efforts of its air conditioning system, it stayed sticky in moderate summer heat. But that really doesn't matter. This glorious one-off will always be the coolest car everywhere it goes.
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Why we won't see another V8 Cygnet
Fancy getting your hands on a V8 Cygnet? Unless your name is already on the registration document, you're out of luck. Aston made a deal with the buyer prior to developing the car that it would never produce another one.
Nor will the company say how much the car's new keeper paid to realise such a spectacular dream, although it was undoubtedly enough to purchase several of the brand's more mainstream offerings.
But anyone with their own unlikely dream for one of Aston's other products (and sufficient depth of pocket to realise it) is invited to contact the Q division to discuss it in greater detail.
Aston Martin V8 Cygnet
Where Warwickshire Price naOn sale naEngine V8, 4735cc, petrol Power 430bhp at 7300rpm Torque 361lb ft at 5000rpm Gearbox 7-speed automatic Kerb weight 1375kg Top speed 170mph (claimed) 0-60mph 4.2secFuel economy naCO2 naRivals Volkswagen Up GTI, Kia Picanto GT-Line
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Saying goodbye to the Aston Martin Cygnet
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Source: https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/first-drive-aston-martin-v8-cygnet
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