Why you’d want a Maserati Quattroporte V
Outstandingly elegant Pininfarina styling with numerous classy touches make the Quattroporte V stand out from its rivals. The styling makes it look smaller than it is, and on the road it shrinks around you, feeling poised and purposeful with 395-435bhp available to hurl its two-ton hulk along, accompanied by a great V8 growl.
With a wide choice of supersaloons from the early 2000s now dropping into the £10-20k bracket, it’s interesting that the Quattroporte has a strong following among classic car owners, significantly boosting Maserati Club UK membership. It’s a car that evokes passion and heritage, and is a driver’s car first and foremost.
It’s immensely – scarily – complex and you don’t want to own one once they start going wrong, unless you’re extremely handy and happy to fit secondhand parts. Significant electrical glitches affected even Autocar’s road-test car, so low mileage is no guarantee of reliability.
Two transmissions were offered and are the most important choice when selecting which model to buy. At first there was only the six-speed automated-manual DuoSelect transaxle, which some people love, especially in paddle-select manual operation, but which is considered awkward and jerky compared to other modern transmissions when used in its fully automatic mode.