In the world of Myers-Briggs youre either an I or an E. An introvert or an extrovert. The personality test doesnt analyze a persons automotive preferences, but if it did its obvious which group would gravitate to the Bentley Continental GT Speed Convertible. This English cruiser is big and brutish, tailor made for the big Es of the world.
Especially in our testers shade of green. Bentley calls it Apple Green and its a garish hue ideal for eccentrics and Gwyneth Paltrows daughter. A warning if you chose to go green: People will turn their heads. People will point and stare, and they will mouth obscenities. (What the is that?!)
But even a more subtle shade would do little or nothing to mask the two-door mass. It stretches almost 16 feet long and its wider than Bentleys own Mulsanne flagship sedan. Itll easily outshine the Cadillac Escalade in a chrome showdown, and its bright red brake calipers only bring more attention to the 21-inch wheels. Yup, the Continental GT Speed Convertible is a bona-fide attention grabber.
The Continental lineup may be dominated by V-8s, but lurking underneath the GT Speed Convertibles hood is Volkswagen Groups monster 6.0-liter, twin-turbo W-12 churning out 626 hp and 605 lb-ft of torque. Its a big engine for a big car that tipped our scales at 5,565 pounds. Despite its heft, the droptop Bentley ran to 60 mph in a quick 4.0 seconds and completed a quarter mile in 12.7 seconds running at 109.9 mph. If you have enough room, Bentley says the GT Speed will top out at 203 mph. Meanwhile, popping the drivetrain into Sport mode has two benefits. For starters, shifts from the eight-speed auto are snappier, if not abrupt, and the exhaust system opens up to amplify its deep snarl.
Piloting the Continental GT Speed Convertible through the canyons is definitely entertaining, if not comical. We expected a clumsy mess, but instead got cool and composed. About 55 percent of its weight sits at the front axle, but the chassis remains surprisingly balanced until you really push it hard through the turns. The optional carbon ceramic brakes ($5,990) also impressed us, stopping the two-and-a-half ton droptop from 60 mph in just 110 feet.
While the canyons were fun, the Bentley excels on the open highway. The air suspension does an outstanding job of erasing road blemishes and there are zero hints of wind noise. We wouldnt be surprised if that soft top were bulletproof. To get an idea of how quiet it is at highway speeds, ride in a Mercedes S-Class while wearing earplugs. Its that silent.
Its not surprisingly that the interior materials and craftsmanship are top-notch. Thankfully, our test cars cabin was dominated by gray leather and spiffy aluminum accents with a machined-finished circular pattern. The entire softtop headliner was wrapped in tight-fitting suede.
The tech, however, is woefully stuck in the early 2000s. The voice command system obeys just as well as a pug puppy and connecting Bluetooth devices requires a clumsy process done with the steering wheel controls and not the main touchscreen. USB ports? Zero. If you want to charge anything, youll have to run by Pep Boys and pick up a USB adaptor to plug into the 12-volt slot. Meanwhile, the premium Naim sound system sounds decent with CDs, but loses a significant amount of clarity with compressed music files commonly used with personal audio devices or streaming services like Spotify. Add to that the absence of driver assistance items (like blind-spot monitoring) and its evident the Contis electrical architecture hasnt changed much since the first-gen model debuted in 2003.
Despite our test cars technological shortcomings and eye-searing shade of paint, its very much a timeless cruiser and a rolling expression of economic privilege with an as-tested price of $289,795. That said, there are other options with just as much exclusivity, but a tad more tech. The Rolls-Royce Dawn would be one choice, and the upcoming Mercedes-Benz S-Class Cabriolet would be another. A Myers-Briggs test cant determine a winner in this case, but perhaps we could settle it in an upcoming Big Test of these big drop-tops.
| 2016 Bentley Continental GT Speed Convertible | |
| BASE PRICE | $263,400 |
| PRICE AS TESTED | $289,795 |
| VEHICLE LAYOUT | Front-engine, AWD, 4-pass, 2-door convertible |
| ENGINE | 6.0L/626-hp/605-lb-ft twin-turbo DOHC 48-valve W-12 |
| TRANSMISSION | 8-speed automatic |
| CURB WEIGHT (F/R DIST) | 5,565 lb (55/45%) |
| WHEELBASE | 108.1 in |
| LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT | 189.2 x 87.7 x 54.8 in |
| 0-60 MPH | 4.0 sec |
| QUARTER MILE | 12.6 sec @ 109.9 mph |
| BRAKING, 60-0 MPH | 110 ft |
| LATERAL ACCELERATION | 0.87 g (avg) |
| MT FIGURE EIGHT | 25.3 sec @ 0.76 g (avg) |
| EPA CITY/HWY/COMB FUEL ECON | 12/20/15 mpg |
| ENERGY CONS., CITY/HWY | 281/169 kW-hrs/100 miles |
| CO2 EMISSIONS, COMB | 1.33 lb/mile |
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