Curbside Classic: 1989 Aston Martin V8 Zagato Volante – The Car In The Iron Mask

It was only last year when I regaled CC with the coupé version of the Aston Martin V8 Zagato, thinking naively that there wouldn’t be an encore. Yet here we are, faced with the ever more exclusive convertible. And it’s British Week of ‘80s month (till the end of June, while stocks last), so I had little choice but to re-regale.

Quick recap, then: Aston Martin and Zagato go back a ways, but the V8 coupé was the first car the Italian coachbuilder made in double-digit quantities for the British marque. And it was only double-digits: only 52 coupés were made in 1986-87. But it was the go-go ‘80s, so they sold immediately, leading Aston and Zagato to devise a drop-top version as an immediate follow-up.

And so the V8 Zagato Volante was premiered at the 1987 Geneva Motor Show, though it was actually made from a coupé that had not yet been sold. Six months or so later, the Zagato Volante was in the Aston range. Another 36 cars were made, the final one only being completed in 1990.

There were a number of differences with the coupé. The most obvious one was the front end, which became an interesting venetian blind affair. Pretty radical. I distinctly recall seeing one of these up close when I lived in London back in the late ‘90s and wondering whether it was some weird one-off. One of 37, it turns out.

The back end did not see any changes compared to the coupé. But what was markedly different was the engine. When the coupé was made, the goal was to make the fastest Aston Martin ever. It made sense: the body was to be all aluminium panels, the chassis was shortened by a foot and the aerodynamics were pretty advanced, as per Zagato traditions.

The issue was the engine. The old 5.3 litre DOHC V8 still had a lot of life in it, but only when fed by four massive Weber carbs would it produce the 430hp required to reach the mythical 300kph max speed Aston Martin were aiming for. The problem was the Zagato’s low hood, which had to be deformed with a massive bulge to clear said Webers. Here’s a picture of the coupé’s engine – what a beast!

While we’re at it, here are a few extra pictures of the red coupé I wrote up last year, whose engine we just glanced at. That power bulge is not too bad from this angle, but in the metal it does add to the car’s oddity. And not necessarily in a good way.

The Volante’s hood is flat and lacking NACA inlets, though. Because it was deemed more of a cruiser (and it was a little heavier than the coupé anyway), Aston elected to fit it with the fuel-injected version of the V8, providing the rear wheels with 320hp. Quite a climbdown from the coupé, but hey, it sure looked better.

Zagato made 13 left-hand-drive cabriolets, of which nine were fitted with the ZF five-speed manual. Most of the RHD cars got the three-speed Torqueflite, apparently.

Oh course, this being the Magical Meiji Jingu Avenue of Automotive Wet Dreams, I was able to realize this shot of the two flavours of Aston V8 Zagatos. Take your pick – my personal preference goes to the drop-top, just because it’s the cleaner design of the two. Plus I don’t think 320hp could be termed as “not enough power” for a two-seater in any conceivable universe.

The enigmatic iron mask face is also part of the attraction, though it seems some Volantes were either produced with the coupé’s front end, or were converted later – possibly a bit of both. If the car was ordered that way, fair enough, it’s the client’s aesthetic choice and I’m sure Zagato were eager to please. But those venetian blinds give the Volante an air of mystery, as opposed to the coupé’s just-plain-weird face.

Finding one is tricky enough, but affording it is another matter. Back when these were (hand)made, they retailed at $175k, which is a nice chunk of change. And nowadays, the price of admission seems to sit around the $200-300k area, so they haven’t really depreciated too much. Rowan Atkinson’s (a.k.a Mr Bean) famous coupé, modified by Aston themselves to race spec, fetched over £250k a decade ago. I think I’ll stick to Minis.

 

Related post:

Curbside Classic: 1986 Aston Martin V8 Vantage Coupé by Zagato – Lightweight Unobtainium Brick, by T87