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Aston Martin DB5

Aston Martin DB5
Aston Martin DB5 - Flickr - Alexandre Prévot (5) (cropped).jpg
Overview
Manufacturer Aston Martin
Production 1963–1965
1,059 produced
Body and chassis
Class Grand tourer (S)
Body style 2-door 2+2 coupé
2-door convertible (123)
2-door shooting brake (13)
Layout FR layout
Doors 2
Powertrain
Engine

DOHC Straight six, 3995 cc, 282 bhp @ 5500 rpm

280 lbs-ft @ 4500 rpm
Transmission 5-speed ZF box or optional Borg-Warner 3-speed automatic
Dimensions
Length 4.57 metres (179.9 in)
Width 1.68 metres (66.1 in)
Chronology
Predecessor Aston Martin DB4
Successor Aston Martin DB6

DOHC Straight six, 3995 cc, 282 bhp @ 5500 rpm

The Aston Martin DB5 is a British luxury grand tourer that was made by Aston Martin and designed by the Italian coachbuilder Carrozzeria Touring Superleggera. Released in 1963, it was an evolution of the final series of DB4. The DB series was named honouring Sir David Brown (the owner of Aston Martin from 1947 to 1972).

Although not the first in the DB series, the DB5 is famous for being the most recognised cinematic James Bond car, first appearing in the James Bond film Goldfinger (1964).

The principal differences between the DB4 Series V and the DB5 are the all-aluminium engine, enlarged from 3.7 L to 4.0 L; a new robust ZF five-speed transmission (except for some of the very first DB5s); and three SU carburettors. This engine, producing 282 bhp (210 kW), which propelled the car to 145 mph (233 km/h), available on the Vantage (high powered) version of the DB4 since March 1962, became the standard Aston Martin power unit with the launch in September 1963 of the DB5.

Standard equipment on the DB5 included reclining seats, wool pile carpets, electric windows, twin fuel tanks, chrome wire wheels, oil cooler, magnesium-alloy body built to superleggera patent technique, full leather trim in the cabin and even a fire extinguisher. All models have two doors and are of a 2+2 configuration.

Like the DB4, the DB5 used a live rear axle At the beginning, the original four-speed manual (with optional overdrive) was standard fitment, but it was soon dropped in favour of the ZF five-speed. A three-speed Borg-Warner DG automatic transmission was available as well. The automatic option was then changed to the Borg-Warner Model 8 shortly before the DB6 replaced the DB5.

Standard coupé:

The high-performance DB5 Vantage was introduced in 1964 featuring three Weber twin-choke 45DCOE side-draft carburettors and revised camshaft profiles, delivering greater top-end performance at the expense of overall flexibility, especially as legendary Webers are renowned as 'full-throttle' devices. This engine produced 315 hp (235 kW). Only 65 DB5 Vantage coupés were built.


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