Rebuilt Aston Martin DB9 transformed into a Corvette-powered 007 tribute. Build hides propane-fed flame throwers behind grille-mounted minigun props. LS3 V8 swap and movie-inspired gadgets create one seriously unconventional GT. Over the decades, James Bond has driven all manner of wild cars. Seriously, he’s piloted Bentleys, BMWs, Toyotas, and even a Triumph. No brand is more closely associated with him than Aston Martin, though. Even then, none of the modifications Q made to any of those cars were as real and wild as what we have here. This is a running and driving DB9 with a Corvette V8 and actual flame throwers in the grille. Read: The General Lee Has Picked Up A Slight Prancing Habit Built by Conquer Custom in Tampa, Florida, this 2006 DB9 started life as a fairly traditional British grand tourer. Somewhere along the line, though, somebody decided “traditional” wasn’t nearly enough. It’s unclear if that happened before or after a crash turned this Aston into a “total loss” but either way, the shop transformed it into a rolling 007 tribute. The end result looks like Bond’s company car after spending too much time on internet forums. Photos BaT The biggest change sits under the hood. Aston Martin’s original naturally aspirated 5.9-liter V12 is gone, replaced by a 6.2-liter LS3 V8 complete with a mild camshaft, custom intake, long-tube headers, and Holley electronics. Power goes rearward through a Corvette-sourced 4L65E four-speed automatic transaxle. Purists will almost certainly have strong opinions on that sentence. That said, let’s be real. Nobody is overly concerned about the gearbox here. After all, if it had three pedals, the driver wouldn’t have a free hand for the party tricks. Behind the grille, a linear actuator tilts the front fascia forward to reveal twin minigun-style assemblies. They aren’t weapons, of course, but they do run on propane and oxygen tanks mounted in the trunk and shoot actual flames. One might normally assume that an LS-swapped Aston Martin was enough. The owner here clearly didn’t, and yes, there are more gadgets. Photos BaT The car also features smoke canisters mounted at the rear for dramatic exits, a custom digital gauge display with 007 graphics, and a switch panel in the cabin that looks more movie prop than OEM. The cabin has been retrimmed in black Alcantara, a Bluetooth audio system has been added, and the original climate controls remain, though the air-conditioning compressor now works via a separate manual toggle switch. That’s not the only oddity, either. The windshield wipers no longer function, the horn is activated from the dashboard, and the seller notes fuel has to be added slowly. Again, this is a salvaged vehicle. It’s far from perfect, but it’s also wonderfully unique. As of this writing, someone has signed up to spend at least $38,250 on it. Would you? If the answer is yes, check out the listing over here. Photos BaT