2017 Aston Martin DB11 Revealed!
We start with the bad news:
As previously reported,
Aston Martin’s glorious-sounding naturally aspirated V-12 engine won’t
be making the transition to the new DB11. The engine that has powered
all of the company’s larger products since 2003, and was essentially two
Ford Duratec V-6s joined at the crank, is soon to be retired and we
will not hear its heavenly wail again. Black armbands will be issued.
Let’s cheer ourselves up by skipping straight to the better news,
namely that the DB11
has resisted the trend of reduced cylinder count and is keeping a V-12,
in this case a new twin-turbocharged unit that Aston has developed
itself. (We’ll have to wait until the replacement for the smaller
Vantage to meet the first
AMG-powered Aston.)
The new 5.2-liter V-12 shares bore centers with the old 5.9-liter
engine and will be built at Aston’s engine plant in Cologne, but
everything else about it is claimed to be new. We suspect that the
engine’s 600 horsepower—60 more than
the DB9 GT—will
help most potential buyers move on quickly from the pain of losing the
old naturally aspirated engine. It also produces 516 lb-ft of torque,
available from 1500 rpm to 5000 rpm. By contrast, the DB9’s max of 457
lb-ft arrived at a lofty 5500 rpm.
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