Skip advert
Advertisement

Aston Martin Valour revealed: V12 special bids farewell to the manual gearbox

The limited-run Valour has been unveiled to celebrate Aston’s 110th year as a manufacturer

To celebrate its 110th anniversary, Aston Martin has revealed the Valour: a driver-focused V12 special following in the footsteps of the one-off Victor. Unlike the CC100 concept built to mark the brand’s 100th year, the Valour will be put into production as a road-legal special, limited to 110 units worldwide. It'll also be the last Aston equipped with a manual transmission.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Pairing a front-mounted 5.2-litre twin-turbocharged V12 with a bespoke six-speed manual and a mechanical limited-slip differential, the Valour was designed as a true driver’s car from the outset. While not quite as powerful as the 836bhp, 7.3-litre V12 in the Victor, the Valour’s 705bhp output puts it ahead of the likes of the V12 Speedster and V12 Vantage. Torque stands at 555lb ft.

> Aston Martin Victor review – one-off V12 hypercar driven

The design takes inspiration from Aston Martin models of the ‘70s and ‘80s, reimagining the original V8 Vantage and RHAM/1 ‘Muncher’ Le Mans car with modern day production techniques. The Valours clamshell bonnet features twin NACA ducts and the same ‘horse shoe’ vent as seen on the Victor, with Aston’s trademark grille flanked by carbonfibre intakes. At the rear, bespoke LED taillights reference the Valkyrie hypercar, with a solid, polished aluminium piece separating upper and lower sections. 

Its designers have also paid close attention to aerodynamics, with a substantial front splitter, rear vortex generators, rear diffuser and a Kamm tail designed to achieve optimum aerodynamic balance. Within that aggressive new diffuser is a triple-exit tailpipe, manufactured from thin, 1mm stainless steel tubing in order to save 7kg over an ordinary stainless system.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

Under its skin, Aston Martin has worked to create a finely honed chassis with bespoke suspension featuring adaptive dampers, unique springs and anti-roll bars tuned specifically for the Valour. Front and rear shear panels are also incorporated into its design, with fuel tank bracing and a rear suspension tower strut brace ensuring maximum structural rigidity. Geometry has been fine tuned for the Valour too, with camber, caster and toe settings designed to offer the best on-road performance. The steering system has also been honed to remove any undesirable slack, improving feedback as a result.

Behind Victor-esque, 21-inch lightweight diamond cut wheels are a set of 410mm front, 360mm rear carbon ceramic discs, reducing unsprung mass by 26kg over steel items – calipers are 6-piston front, 4-piston rear. Unusually, Aston Martin hasn’t opted for hardcore semi-slick tyres like the Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2R, but instead the new road-centric Pilot Sport S 5 with an AML-specific compound – the front tyres are 275 in section, with rears at 325. 

Inside the two-seater cockpit, buyers can choose from a choice of a machined aluminium, titanium, carbonfibre or walnut gear knobs, with an exposed linkage standard. As you’d expect with such a car, each example will be fully customised inside and out, with the launch car coming with woollen tweed seat fabric inspired by the seat coverings from the 1959 Le Mans-winning DBR1.

Production of the Aston Martin Valour will begin in Q3 this year, before first deliveries commence in Q4. Just 110 examples will be produced, with pricing yet to be confirmed. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

TVR Griffith (1990 - 2002): a pure and unadulterated sports car
TVR Griffith front
Features

TVR Griffith (1990 - 2002): a pure and unadulterated sports car

The Griffith established TVR as a genuine contender and transformed the company’s fortunes – and it’s still as exhilarating to drive now as it was in …
17 Nov 2024
Aston Martin Valour review – a £1.5m V12 Aston you could drive daily
Aston Martin Valour – front
Reviews

Aston Martin Valour review – a £1.5m V12 Aston you could drive daily

Inspired by a brake‑eating 1970s Le Mans racer and packing a 705bhp twin‑turbo V12 and a manual transmission, the Valour is an Aston Martin for modern…
13 Nov 2024
The new Caterham Seven CSR Twenty is an £80k road-ready Seven
Caterham Seven CSR Twenty – front
News

The new Caterham Seven CSR Twenty is an £80k road-ready Seven

Caterham’s ‘most premium Seven ever built’ costs Lotus Emira money, and celebrates 20 years of the CSR chassis
12 Nov 2024
Mazda Iconic SP rotary concept set for production – the return of the RX-7?
Mazda Iconic SP
News

Mazda Iconic SP rotary concept set for production – the return of the RX-7?

Mazda will turn its rotary-equipped Iconic SP concept into a production sports car in the 'not-so-distant future'
8 Nov 2024
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

2026 BMW 3-series spied, with exhaust pipes
2026 BMW 3-series front
News

2026 BMW 3-series spied, with exhaust pipes

The next 3-series will ring in BMW’s ‘Neue Klasse’ and be electric, hybrid and ICE powered
18 Nov 2024
TVR Griffith (1990 - 2002): a pure and unadulterated sports car
TVR Griffith front
Features

TVR Griffith (1990 - 2002): a pure and unadulterated sports car

The Griffith established TVR as a genuine contender and transformed the company’s fortunes – and it’s still as exhilarating to drive now as it was in …
17 Nov 2024
Cupra Formentor Abt review – a 365bhp crossover for Mercedes-AMG A45 S money
Cupra Formentor Abt – front
Reviews

Cupra Formentor Abt review – a 365bhp crossover for Mercedes-AMG A45 S money

It’s farewell to the original Cupra Formentor with an Abt-tuned run-out package. It’s a quietly excellent car; just a shame about the price...
14 Nov 2024