After many years of development, Aston Martin’s F1 based hypercar has now been revealed. But what makes the Valkyrie stand out from the already exclusive crowd? Well, there is not one single steel component in the vehicle’s structure. With a 100% carbon fibre composition, Valkyrie is astonishingly light, pushing the car’s power-to-weight ratio to levels not often conquered by road legal hypercars.

Its V12 produces 1,000hp and revs to a breathtaking 11,200rpm, aided by a 140hp axial flux electric motor, which sits between the engine and the seven-speed sequential gearbox. Not to forget that Aston Martin have stated the F1 inspired car is only 2,800-lbs of dry mass. Which has us indubitably thinking, any faster and it may fly!
Its unique teardrop style cockpit may be on the smaller side, but the view out is undeniably more race car than road car. You may have asked yourself by now, where are the side mirrors? These have been incorporated into the dashboard design via two rear view digital cameras, one placed on either side.
As you can probably imagine, getting the Valkyrie homologated for road use was not easy. Aston Martin are stated to have created the smallest and lightest number plate light in the world, whilst also spending hundreds of hours designing a bespoke mechanism for the single wiper blade to allow it to follow the curved canopy windscreen.

Aston Martin's symbol of such ingenuity and power is therefore displayed in the famous scarab beetle-inspired Aston Martin wings badge, however, with the Valkyrie this is even different; it's 43% thinner than a human hair. That’s right, the jewel-like enamelled badge has been laid into the paint itself; an aluminium badge just 40 microns thick.
Aston Martin Valkyrie pushes the boundaries of performance; a remarkable journey in engineering to make the impossible possible.
- Roberto Fedeli, Chief Technical Officer