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Aston Martin DB9

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Above: DB9

IT isn't every day you can reach into God's toy box and

choose whatever you want - but the opening of P1

North gave me exactly that opportunity.

Since being founded by F1 World Champion Damon Hill

and his business partner Michael Breen seven years ago,

the prestige and performance car club has been allowing

its mainly Southern members to pick and choose from a

garage of the world's most exciting cars.

Now it has opened a branch in the North West with an

initial selection of cars worth more than £1 million and I

was lucky enough to be able to sample one of them in

Lancashire.

I walked past rows of gleaming machinery - a mighty

Ford GT, Ferrari 430s coupé and convertible, a variety of

Porsche 911s Turbo, even a stunning Bentley Continental

GTC. But I headed for the ranks of Aston Martins, lurking

in rather a discreet fashion at the back.

I have to admit to a soft spot for the Vanquish, the

modern equivalent of Sean Connery in a DB5 - a thug in a

dinner jacket - and the new V8 Vantage is quite possibly

the most beautiful car in production today. But the sun

was shining and a drive along Lancashire's Riviera

beckoned so I asked Nick Bailey, P1 North's affable

General Manager, for the keys to the DB9 Volante.

It just felt right to be driving a car as urbane as the DB9

Volante as I headed through an early morning Southport,

listening with ever greater amusement to the impressed

noises coming from our resolutely southern snapper, who

wasn't expecting Southport to be 'as nice as this…'

The Aston's 450 bhp V12 was purring away happily in

front of us, as civilised as the daughter of a couple of

Essex brawlers, made good and sent to a Swiss finishing

school. That isn't quite as tortured an analogy as you'd

think when you discover the V12 was created by bolting

two Ford Mondeo V6s together. Through the traffic, I was

happy enough to leave the gearbox in D, selected by a

button on the dash rather than a gearstick, leaving what

Jeremy Clarkson scathingly refers to as the 'flappy

paddles' alone until the road opened up.

Heading out of Southport towards Lancashire Police's

HQ at Hutton didn't seem to be the most sensible place

to stretch the Aston's legs either but the gentle cruise did

show the Aston's gait at its most fluid, the car loping

along in the sunshine in a seemingly effortless way.

Roof down, the buffeting was perfectly acceptable at

these sorts of speeds, and the traffic through Preston, as we

headed inland to cross the Ribble, gave a chance to admire

the finer points of the interior. The dials are based on the

faces of upmarket watches and glow in an exquisitely

expensive way. The leatherwork is fine and it is only the

minor details, like the rather jarring Volvo satnav and the

electric motors in the hood mechanism that whirr in a way

that gives you little faith in the prospects of their longevity,

that leave you wondering whether a few more months in the

development cycle wouldn't have been well spent.

In Lytham, the car seemed to breathe a sigh of relief and

it felt like the residents reciprocated. Most ostentatious

cars draw less than appreciative receptions from passersby

and other road users but the Aston seemed to be

immune from this. It is just so handsome, and in gunmetal

grey, so quintessentially English that it garners nothing but

friendly nods or even thumbs up. The only negative

reaction I got all day was one of obvious disappointment

from the girl who nearly cricked her neck to see who was

being photographed next to it.

As we headed through Blackpool, the thumps in the

road showed up the only small fly in the DB9 Volante

ointment - that of scuttle shake over sharp bumps in the

road. As the low profile tyres hit a transverse ridge or

pothole, the whole car judders in a way that a Bentley

Continental GTC, or even the far cheaper Jaguar XKR

doesn't. That said, you would have to be a motoring

journalist, or I suppose a member of P1, to be able to

drive cars like this back to back in order to notice the

difference.

Out of Blackpool and the road finally opens up across

Cockerham Moss. A couple of paddle-operated

downchanges are briskly delivered with perfect automated

blips of the throttle, the valves in the exhaust open and the

old girl fair throws herself down the road. It's not quite as

bad as asking a dowager to jive, but it does still feel

somehow inappropriate.

As we pulled up in front of the Stork Pub in Conder

Green for a well deserved cold drink and a sandwich at

the most northerly part of our drive, opinions are still

divided as to whether the car is worth its £115,000. But

there is no denying its beauty.


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