2010 Bentley Continental Flying Spur
The Bentley Continental two-doors and the four-door Flying Spur sedan were catalysts: They completely reinvented the fusty Bentley brand and brought a whole new crew of rap moguls, reality stars, and pro athletes to the fold, for better or worse. For 2010, the Flying Spur carries on with the same styling it’s worn since early in the decade, albeit in a couple of new colors. Prices begin at just less than $200,000, and the primary competition for those dollars are machines like the Maserati Quattroporte, the Audi S8, the Mercedes-Benz S-Class, and the Porsche Panamera.
The 2010 Bentley Continental Flying Spur is long, low, and wide, but not terribly rakish as four-door sedans like the 2010 Jaguar XJ can be. There’s no mistaking its streamlined Bentley grille, and the chromed mesh grilles and air intakes between the quad-oval headlights, which still look contemporary. It “tastefully” invokes its “estimable heritage without getting sentimental about it,” Automobile reports. But the more upright pillars and glass areas don’t make the same visual impact; it’s low-key and not flamboyant, even on close inspection-the opposite of the two-door Bentley Continental GT. It’s been out since 2006, and the 2010 Bentley Continental Flying Spur’s formal roofline is looking a little less compelling with the years.
Edmunds points out that there have been only “minor cosmetic revisions” to this four-door Bentley since it was launched. Edmunds says the “Flying Spur might lose some style points to its ultra-expensive competition.” The lineup also includes the “$204,795 Speed” edition, which, according to Motor Trend, is distinguished by “dark-tinted front grilles, wider tail pipes, and split-spoke 20-inch alloys.



