This modified Scion iQ sports Aston Martin Cygnet style body parts and a few performance upgrades
Built by Aston for a customer, the 430 hp posh Toyota IQ can reach 62 mph in 4.2 seconds and touch 170 mph
Badge engineering has been around for decades but it’s hard to think of ones that are objectively better than the original
Cynical cost cutting, sheer laziness, and a simple lack of funds have given us some terrible clones over the years, but which is the worst?
James Bond wannabees flocked to Auto Trader after movie’s UK opening; PTs and hair transplant clinics probably similarly busy
Aston’s Cygnet was a joke when new, but rock-solid residuals mean it was a seriously smart investment
The Aston Martin Cygnet is powered by a 1.3-liter four-cylinder with 97 hp
Oddly, the Aston Martin Cygnet looks to be holding its value pretty well on the used car market
The Aston Martin Cygnet V8 makes no sense but we’re so glad it exists
This is probably the closest thing to a review this crazy Aston Martin Cygnet will get
Five times the power and two-and-a-half times the torque makes Aston’s eight-cylinder city car go like never before
One-off show car from Q by Aston Martin shoehorns th old Vantage’s V8 under the hood of the tiny Cygnet city car
Of all the models that Aston Martin has made over the past
For a Britain-based carmaker, Aston Martin sure lacks a sense of humor