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The letters "DB" are the initials of David Brown, the owner of Aston Martin between 1947 and 1972. [7] [8] Although the DB9 succeeded the DB7, Aston Martin did not name the car DB8 due to fears that the name would suggest that it featured a V8 engine—the DB9 has a V12. [9]
Hello all, I have listed this article, Aston Martin DB9, for peer review because I'd like to get it to featured article status. There are only five featured articles based on automobiles, and I would like to increase that substantially given the number of views these articles can get. Thanks in advance, and any comments are appreciated (but try ...
Pine seedlings being bred to resist white pine blister rust by the US Forest Service Cronartium ribicola is a heteroecious, macrocyclic pathogen on Pinus spp and Ribes spp. [ 7 ] Because young pines are smaller and less developed than mature trees, they are most susceptible to the pathogen.
The DB9 was the first car to use the VH platform.. The British carmaker Aston Martin developed the vertical–horizontal (VH) vehicle platform to serve as the basis of most of the mass-produced vehicles in its lineup manufactured between 2003 and 2016, [note 1] comprising the DB9, followed by the Vantage, DBS, Rapide and Vanquish.
"Although it succeeded the DB7, Aston Martin did not name the car DB8 due to fears that the name would suggest that it featured a V8 engine—the DB9 has a V12." - The first part of the sentence is a dangling modifier (Aston Martin did not succeed the DB7; the DB9 did). whoops, fixed.
1929–1932 Aston Martin International; 1932–1932 Aston Martin International Le Mans; 1932–1934 Aston Martin Le Mans; 1933–1934 Aston Martin 12/50 Standard; 1934–1936 Aston Martin Mk II; 1934–1936 Aston Martin Ulster; 1936–1940 Aston Martin 500-litre Speed Models (23 built) The last 8 were fitted with C-type bodywork; 1937–1939 ...
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Aston Martin unveiled the DB9, a model initially designed by Ian Callum and completed by Henrik Fisker, at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 2003. [6] [7] [8] The DB9 was the first car to employ Aston Martin's "vertical/horizontal" (VH) platform and the first production model built at Aston Martin's facility in Gaydon, Warwickshire, England.