The Aston Martin company has had a truly chequered career. Over the years there have
been a number of times when it looked certain to be going to the wall but, on each
occasion, it was saved by fortunate circumstances – like a major win of a title or at an
important event.
In 1960 Aston Martin introduced their DB4GT Zagato, a great performing road-legal semi-
competition car but one that proved difficult for the average driver to manage on the road
and was outperformed by the Ferrari 250GTO on the racetrack. Following this Aston
Martin went through one of its regular periods of instability.
In 1985 things started to look up again and Aston announced a new association with
Zagato with the intention of building their fastest car ever. By fitting an uprated version of
the Vantage engine into a smaller, lighter bodied car, they claimed they could produce just
that. One that could easily compete with Ferrari’s latest Testarossa or GTO, or even the
Lamborghini Countach QV. Many sceptics doubted Aston Martin’s claims but the company
went ahead and accepted substantial deposits based on little more than a promise.
Released in April 1986 Aston Martin displayed not just a concept model but three fully
trimmed and running production models. They had been built and trimmed by Zagato in
Italy, with alloy and reinforced polyester bodies on powered chassis shipped from the UK.
The Vantage floorplan was considerably modified for the Vantage Zagato as it was strictly
a two-seater coupe with the familiar Aston Martin grille cleverly built into the smooth
moulded nose. This was surrounded by four, large, rectangular headlights. The smooth
bonnet line was only broken by the large bulge designed to accommodate the Vantage
engine’s carburettors.
The new Zagato was significantly smaller than the Vantage and it was blessed with a far
better drag coefficient. The 5.4-litre V8 engine with four overhead camshafts developed
322 kW and pushed the car to a top speed of 300 km/h. It was claimed to do the 0-60
km/h sprint in 4.7 seconds while still in first gear!
While the Vantage suspension had independent coil springs all round, the Zagato
suspension comprised coil springs and wishbones at the front with a de Dion rear.
The Aston Martin Zagato, like the Vantage, was a very fast, very expensive and very
beautifully finished motor and a credit to the marque.