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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 ...
This page is a compilation of sports cars, coupés, roadsters, kit cars, supercars, hypercars, electric sports cars, race cars, and super SUVs, both discontinued and still in production (or will be planned to produce). Cars that have sport trims (such as the Honda Civic SI) will be listed under the sport trims section. Production tunes will ...
Pages in category "Aston Martin vehicles" The following 53 pages are in this category, out of 53 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
The 1969–1972 Aston Martin DBS V8 coupe/convertible was Aston Martin's first V8 model. This engine was an all-aluminium construction with double overhead camshafts and was used in several models up until 2000 when the Virage model was discontinued.
The list is also limited to production road cars that: ... Limited production convertible – 2,100 mm ... Aston Martin Valkyrie, 6,500 cc (396.7 cu in) Cosworth ...
Pages in category "Aston Martin racing cars" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. ... Aston Martin DPLM; E. EMKA Aston Martin; L. Lola-Aston ...
Foreign-made vehicles imported into the U.S., whether new or used, for personal use or for sale, are subject to duty at 2.5% for cars, 25% for trucks and 2.4% (or free) for motorcycles, per U.S ...
In March 2017, Aston Martin revealed that the car would be named Valkyrie, after the Norse mythological figures. [13] According to Red Bull, the name was chosen to continue the tradition of "V" nomenclature of Aston Martin's automobiles and to distinguish the vehicle as a high-performance car (the "V" was used as the distinguishing factor). [14]