Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale

The Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale is a five-seater concept car built by Ghia for Lagonda. It was designed by Moray Callum at Ghia and unveiled in 1993 at the Geneva Motor Show alongside the Aston Martin DB7, designed by Moray's older brother, Ian Callum.[1] Built to gauge interest for a 4-door Aston Martin model, the concept was well received, but never went into production as Ford decided that the Lagonda brand would be too expensive to revive due to its relative obscurity outside of the U.K.[2][3] Interior Design by David Wilkie: Colour and materials by Sally Ericson.

Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale
The 3 designers of the 1993 Lagonda Vignale with the car (l-r): Moray Callum, David Wilkie, Sally Erickson Wilson.
Overview
ManufacturerLagonda (Aston Martin)
Also calledLagonda Vignale
Production1993
2 built
DesignerMoray Callum at Ghia
Body and chassis
ClassConcept car
Body style4-door sedan
LayoutFR layout
PlatformFord Panther platform
RelatedLincoln Town Car
Powertrain
Engine4.6 L DOHC Ford Modular V8
Transmission4-speed automatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase3,117.8 mm (122.75 in)
Length5,232.4 mm (206 in)
Width1,981.2 mm (78 in)
Height1,447.8 mm (57 in)

Specifications

The Lagonda Vignale is based on an extended 1990 Lincoln Town Car chassis and uses that car's 4.6 L Ford Modular V8 engine producing 190 hp (142 kW; 193 PS) and 270 lb⋅ft (366 N⋅m) of torque and mated to a 4-speed automatic transmission. It also shares the Town Car's independent front, and solid rear suspension. It was planned that a production version of the Lagonda Vignale would utilise a 5,935 cc (5.9 L; 362.2 cu in), 48 valve V12 engine, the same one later used, albeit in an overhauled state, in the Aston Martin V12 Vanquish.[2] The body of the Lagonda Vignale is made from composite materials and features nickel trim in place of chrome to take advantage of the subtle tones found in nickel.[4] The interior was designed by David Wilkie and its materials were chosen by Sally Wilson. It features analine-dyed parchment leather, beech wood and aluminum trim, woolen carpets and headliner, nickel brightwork and rear power operated desks which feature a laptop on one side and a vanity on the other.[4]

Production

Three Lagonda Vignales were built in total. The original two, built by Ghia, had seating for five and used the Town Car 4.6 L V8 engine. One was finished in grey while the other was finished in Sorrento Blue. The grey car was destroyed, while the blue car was sold in 2002 by Ford for US$403,500 at auction, surpassing its estimate of US$60,000–120,000.[5] The third car, built by the Works Service department and codenamed DP2138, featured a myriad of changes from the original design with the intention of putting the car into production.[6] It used a different Ford platform, giving it smaller dimensions, changes to the design, including different headlights and a redesigned grille, burgundy paintwork, and, most notably, the 5.9 L V12 engine originally planned for the concept. Additionally, it could only seat four as the rear bench seat had been replaced by twin armchairs. Only one example was built and it was sold to the Sultan of Brunei for £1.3m in 1995.

gollark: Shouldn't you use your AUR helper of choice™ for it then?
gollark: Is mesa-git an AUR package?
gollark: Lua isn't very fast (except LuaJIT), although Python is *particularly* slow so who knows.
gollark: Imagine using C when you could use Rust.
gollark: Very impressive.

References

  1. "Concepts from Future Past: Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale - 95 Octane". 95octane.com. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  2. "Classic Concepts: 1993 Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale". www.classicdriver.com. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  3. "1993 Aston Martin Lagonda Vignale History, Pictures, Value, Auction Sales, Research and News". conceptcarz.com. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  4. "Lagonda Vignale". Rick Carey's Collector Car Auction Reports. 2017-03-22. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  5. "LAGONDA VIGNALE CONCEPT". Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  6. "Lagonda Vignale DP2138 «  Aston Martins.com". astonmartins.com. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.