Specs
Model tested: Aston Martin DB11 AMR
Price from: £180,725
Price as tested: N/A
Powertrain: V12, 5204 cc turbocharged petrol
Gearbox: 8-speed automatic
Warranty: 3 years, unlimited miles
Power
639 hp
Torque
516 lb ft
Driveline
Front engine, rear-wheel drive
0-62mph
3.7 sec
Top speed
208 mph
Kerb weight
1,870 kg
Fuel economy
24.8 mpg
CO2
265 g/km
Dimensions
4,739/1,940/1,279 mm
Boot capacity
270 litres

Aston Martin DB11 AMR (2018) review

Aston Martin's flagship DB11 AMR boasts a 639hp V12 and some (fully justified) go-faster stripes. We drive it.

Aston Martin DB11 AMR

Aston Martin scored an own-goal with its V8-engined DB11. Launched a year after the flagship DB11 V12, the first AMG-powered Aston carried a 98hp deficit, but 115kg less weight meant it was just 0.1 seconds slower to 62mph. It also looked identical, felt more agile to drive and cost £13,000 less. Suddenly, the DB11 V12 looked a bit silly.

Enter the DB11 AMR: a reworked V12 that replaces the standard car outright. With more power, a sharper chassis and cosmetic tweaks, it follows in the tyre tracks of the Vantage AMR and Rapide AMR. Headline stats are 639hp (up 31hp), 0-62mph in 3.7sec (0.2 sec quicker) and a ‘continent-crushing’ 208mph top speed. No wonder it has a go-faster stripe.

Prices for the AMR start at £180,725 – a hefty £28,000 more than the DB11 V8. Is there a niche for this V12-engined super-coupe? A visit to Aston Martin’s Nurburgring test centre will provide answers…

Mild-mannered menace

Aston Martin DB11 AMR

First, a couple of clarifications. No, I didn’t actually drive on the Nordschleife, but the surrounding Rhineland roads are among Germany’s finest and, frankly, a better real-world test. And no, you’re not obliged to have the stripe. It was a delete-option on the first 100 ‘Signature Edition’ launch cars.

Stripe or no stripe, the DB11 is still a near-flawless piece of design: clearly indebted to its DB9 and DB7 forebears, yet markedly more muscular and modern. Few modern cars are truly beautiful, but this one.

Thankfully, Aston Martin hasn’t gilded the lily elsewhere either; this makeover is mild, not wild. The front grille, splitter, sills and roof are finished in gloss black, with slashes of bare carbon fibre in the air intakes. All brightwork has been binned, while dark headlight surrounds and smoked taillight lenses add some mild-mannered menace.

The DB11 AMR rides on new 20-inch forged alloys, saving 3.5kg of unsprung weight per corner. And the exhaust has been retuned, too. Chief Engineer Matt Becker promises a soundtrack with added “spirit and sport”.

My test car was a £201,995 Signature Edition and thus boasted copious carbon fibre inside and out, plus a Stirling Green and lime colour scheme inspired by Aston’s GT3 and WEC racers.

As with any car of this calibre, though, you can always add more. Notable options include a carbon fibre engine cover and carbon pop-up rear spoiler.

Spot the stripes

Aston Martin DB11 AMR

The dark theme continues inside, with black chrome trim and monotone upholstery. Even in AMR spec, the DB11 is “still very much a GT”, insists Paul Barritt, Vehicle Line Director, and devoid of showy, supercar-style gimmicks. Comfort remains the watchword.

But wait, what’s this? ANOTHER lime green stripe: this time in leather, arcing across the roof lining from windscreen to rear window. Perhaps the Aston is ready to unleash its inner supercar after all.

There are other – more subtle – reminders of AMR-ness, such as logos on the door sills and embossed onto the headrests. Plus the DB11 inherits the Vantage’s squared-off steering wheel, which looks odd but soon becomes second-nature.

Surfaces are trimmed in beautiful, handbag-quality leather and Alcantara, and the shapely, hip-hugging seats offer plenty of electric adjustment. Lest we forget, there are also two rear chairs, albeit too cramped for anyone aged in double figures.

Aston Martin DB11 AMR

The dashboard – a mix of old-fashioned buttons and hidden, touch-sensitive switches and sliders – is a bit of a mish-mash, while the digital instrument cluster already looks dated.

On the plus side, the the Mercedes-supplied ‘Comand’ infotainment system is intuitive to use, complete with an eight-inch screen and 360-degree parking cameras.

Bring out the big guns

As Aston Martin’s PR team was eager to point out, AMR fettling means the DB11 V12 outguns the new, W12-engined Bentley Continental GT. On closer analysis, its advantage is just 4hp, but 639hp is still a lot of power. The Ferrari Roma proffers a paltry 620hp.

The extra snap, crackle and pop from the exhausts is welcome, but the twin-turbo V12 never blasts your eardrums into submission like the AMG V8. It’s more cultured, less brutish, the turbine-like wail at high revs oddly reminiscent of a supercharger.

Aston Martin DB11 AMR

On the road, the overriding impression is of effortless thrust: any gear, any time. Power progression is wonderfully linear and scything past slower traffic (those pesky Ferraris, for example) is hilariously easy. Smooth yet savagely quick, it feels omnipotent.

There’s no escaping the DB11’s sheer size (at 1,940mm, it’s wider than a BMW X5) or its 1,870kg kerb weight. Nonetheless, chassis maestro Becker – who perfected his craft during 26 years at Lotus – has honed the handling without sacrificing compliance or comfort. Spring rates remain the same, but the car’s rear end feels, in Becker’s own words, “more connected and honest”.

On fast-flowing B-roads the AMR corners with precision: reassuringly planted, if not overtly playful. There are three drive modes, GT, Sport and Sport Plus. It feels most at home in GT, which is probably as it should be. Sport is a big step up, with much jerkier throttle response and gearshifts – although using the paddles to swop cogs manually alleviates this. Sport Plus, meanwhile, is best suited to track driving.

Aston Martin DB11 AMR

Aside from gearbox calibration, the DB11’s other minor weakness is its steering. Direct and accurate, it lacks the effusive feedback of the best electric systems – or indeed the new Vantage.

Aston Martin DB11 AMR: verdict

As Aston Martin looks to a future of closer collaboration with Mercedes-AMG, this could be one of its final V12-engined road cars. For that reason alone, it deserves to be celebrated.

The DB11 AMR has flaws, certainly, but also deep reserves of raw talent and winsome charm. I’d choose one over a Continental GT in a heartbeat. A Ferrari Roma, though? I’m not so sure. 

ALSO READ:

Polestar 1 (2020) review

Ford GT (2017) review

Toyota GR Yaris (2020) review

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Tim Pitt
Tim Pitt
Tim has been our Managing Editor since 2015. He enjoys a retro hot hatch and has a penchant for Porsches.

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