This diminutive model apes the shape of Aston Martins most iconic car in such obsessive detail, from the flowing lines of its beautiful bodywork constructed in either fiberglass or carbon fiber to the authentic Aston Martin badges that, parked t alongside a full-sized DB5, its an almost exact facsimile.
The choices include the DB5 Junior, DB5 Vantage Junior, and a DB5 Vantage No Time To Die Edition. The DB5 Junior makes do with a 6.7-horsepower electric motor and a single 1.8-kilowatt-hour battery pack and offers two available driving modes. Novice gives you a single horsepower and a 12-mile-per-hour top speed, while Expert uncorks it all for a 30-mph max.
The DB5 Vantage, as with its full-sized counterpart, ups the performance. Doubling the electric motor’s output yields a healthier 13.4 hp and there’s an additional battery pack to help achieve a 44-mph maximum that’s possible in the Vantage driving mode. Other changes to the Vantage see its body switching from composite material of the standard Junior to full carbon fiber. That goes some way to explaining the roughly $12,000 more you’ll need to find for it.
Read more at: https://www.motor1.com/reviews/598475/2022-aston-martin-db5-junior-first-drive/