Background
The Aston Martin V8 Vantage was hailed at its 1977 introduction as ‘Britain's First Supercar’.
It earned this sobriquet for its 170 mph top speed and the ability of its 5.3 litre V8 engine to propel nearly 2 tonnes of car to 60 mph in a neatly matching 5.3 seconds.
While the Vantage name had been used as a suffix on a number of high-performance versions of Aston Martin cars, this was its first use as name for a distinct model line.
The Vantage differed from the V8 in several key respects.
It had a closed-off hood bulge rather than the open scoop found on the ‘standard’ V8. The grille area was also blanked off and twin driving lights fitted.
The engine incorporated high-performance camshafts, increased compression ratio, larger inlet valves and bigger carburettors mounted on new manifolds for increased output.
Straight-line performance was hugely impressive, with acceleration from 0–60 coming up quicker than the Ferrari Daytona, and 0-100 mph times that outshone the Lamborghini Countach.
The Oscar India (October Introduction) version, introduced in, er, October 1978, featured a small integrated spoiler, a more streamlined bonnet bulge and an increase in power to 390 bhp.
The 1986–1989 580 'X-Pack' specification was a further upgrade, producing 403 bhp. Aston Martin Works Service could push this to 432 bhp with a 6.3 litre engine and, if that still wasn’t quite enough for you, R.S. Williams could oblige with a 510 bhp 7 litre option.
The V8 Vantage was a proper muscle car and one that owed its squat, steroidal stance and sleekly aggressive profile to the design pen of Aston’s William Towns, not some flouncy, curve-obsessed, Italian design diva.
But while it may have had more than enough hairy-chested grunt to out-muscle the Mustangs, Chargers and Corvettes of its trans-Atlantic cousins, it did so with the grace, understated luxury, impeccable pedigree and sheer class of a St. James’ gentleman’s club.
If a Pontiac GTO was Hulk Hogan with a sledgehammer, then the V8 Vantage was David Niven carrying a pair of Purdey 12 gauges.
These Astons were every bit as handmade as a Savile Row suit.
They were crafted by chaps called Claude and Godfrey who smoked briar pipes and had fountain pens and micrometers sticking out of their top pockets.
The example we have for you today is, without a doubt, one of the very best out there and comes with quite possibly the most extensive and exhaustive history we’ve yet seen.







