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  2. Aston Martin DB9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aston_Martin_DB9

    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]

  3. PistonHeads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PistonHeads

    PistonHeads quickly became a go-to website for instant access to the latest news and reviews on performance cars, with popular features like Shed of the Week and Brave Pill. Hailed as the Mumsnet for men by The Times , [ 1 ] the forums were born as a base for car enthusiasts in London to meet to talk about cars and quickly grew to be the ...

  4. Aston Martin DBR9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aston_Martin_DBR9

    The Aston Martin DBR9 is a racing car built by Aston Martin Racing, debuting in 2005 and racing actively in international sportscar racing until the end of GT1 category in 2011. The name DBR9 is derived from the original 24 Hours of Le Mans -winning DBR1 car, named for then-owner David Brown, which not only won the 24 Hour race in 1959 but also ...

  5. Aston Martin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aston_Martin

    Aston Martin was founded in 1913 by Lionel Martin and Robert Bamford. [23] The two had joined forces as Bamford & Martin the previous year to sell cars made by Singer from premises in Callow Street, London where they also serviced GWK and Calthorpe vehicles.

  6. Aston Martin Racing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aston_Martin_Racing

    Aston Martin Racing is a British auto racing team established in 2004 as a partnership between automobile manufacturer Aston Martin and engineering group Prodrive. The partnership was initially created for the purpose of returning Aston Martin to sports car racing with the DBR9, a heavily modified variant of the Aston Martin DB9.

  7. List of Aston Martin vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Aston_Martin_vehicles

    2002–2004 Aston Martin DB AR1; 2004–2016 Aston Martin DB9; 2005–2018 Aston Martin V8 and V12 Vantage; 2007–2012 Aston Martin DBS V12; 2009–2012 Aston Martin One-77 [1] 2010–2020 Aston Martin Rapide/Rapide S; 2011–2012 Aston Martin Virage/Virage Volante; 2011–2013 Aston Martin Cygnet, based on the Toyota iQ [2] [3] 2012–2013 ...

  8. David Brown (entrepreneur) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Brown_(entrepreneur)

    The legendary 'DB' series of Aston Martin cars, including the DB1 (2 Litre Sports), the DB2, the DB3, the DB4, the DB5, the DB6, and the DBS, were named after Brown using his initials. While at the helm of the Aston Martin company, he used a rival product, a Jaguar XJ Series I, as personal transport as it was cheaper to run.

  9. Category:Aston Martin vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Aston_Martin_vehicles

    Aston Martin DB2; Aston Martin DB2/4; Aston Martin DB Mark III; Aston Martin DB4; Aston Martin DB4 GT Zagato; Aston Martin DB4 GT Jet; Aston Martin DB5; Aston Martin DB6; Aston Martin DB7; Aston Martin DB9; Aston Martin DB11; Aston Martin DB12; Aston Martin DBS; Aston Martin DBS V8 by Ogle; Aston Martin DBS (2007) Aston Martin DBX