Seven Aston Martin Valkyrie Owners Should Avoid Track Days For Now
Aston Martin Wants Valkyries Driven
The Aston Martin Valkyrie isn't just another hypercar – it's basically an F1 car that somehow convinced the DMV to hand over a license plate. With a screaming naturally aspirated V12, hybrid wizardry, wild aero, and a body that weighs less than your average lunch order, this thing was built for one thing: going fast.
Aston Martin has been practically begging its wealthy Valkyrie owners to stop treating their cars like garage art and actually drive them. But for seven unlucky US customers, it might be wise to skip the next track day invite.
Unfortunately, a recent recall targets a tiny club: just seven of 51 US 2024 Valkyries, all rocking the track suspension package, are in the crosshairs.
A Rare Problem Found Under Very Specific Conditions
The main issue is a brake master cylinder that can throw a tantrum under a bizarre set of track conditions. If you're really pushing it, a seal inside can warp, which means brake fluid doesn't make its way back to the reservoir when you let off the pedal.
That leaves brake pressure stuck in one corner, so the brakes start dragging and cooking themselves. Keep hammering around the track, and things can get hot enough near the rear brake cooling duct to actually catch fire. Not exactly the kind of hot lap you want.
Aston Martin insists this is a freak occurrence. You'd need the track suspension, a racetrack, and to be driving like you're auditioning for a Fast & Furious sequel, with all the electronic nannies working overtime. In other words, you won't trigger this on your Sunday coffee run.
What Owners Should Do Next
The British automaker first caught the problem over three years ago, when engineers slammed on the brakes during a traction-control test. Turns out, the original master cylinder design didn't play nice with the Valkyrie's electronic systems in those high-impact but rare moments.
The fix is simple: Aston Martin will swap in new master cylinders with updated guts that actually get along with the Valkyrie's electronics. If you're one of the seven, expect a call from Aston Martin telling you to bring your car in. The fix takes about five hours and, yes, it's on the house.
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This story was originally published June 16, 2026 at 10:45 AM.