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1975 Ducati 860 - 6-Page Vintage Motorcycle Test Article

$ 6.93

Availability: 40 in stock
  • Make: Ducati

    Description

    1975 Ducati 860 - 6-Page Vintage Motorcycle Test Article
    Original, Vintage Magazine article
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    Ducati's 750cc V-twin
    turned many heads
    when it appeared on
    these shores in 1972.
    Monthly and weekly mo-
    torcycle publications,
    especially the ones from Italy and
    Germany, had touted it very highly. It
    was some time after these articles
    appeared in print that any of the
    750s found their way to these shores,
    and a regrettably longer time before
    this writer got to ride one.
    Many stories about the "Duck”
    were heard, one especially from Paul
    Smart, who won the inaugural Imola
    200-mile race in the spring of 1972.
    Paul had nothing but praise for the
    machine, saying it was the best han-
    dling big-bore road racing machine
    he’d ever thrown a leg over. He even
    quipped that it was smoother (had
    less of the rider-fatiguing high-fre-
    quency vibration) than his “works”
    Triumph 750cc triple. The Ducati
    folks in Italy were so pleased with his
    Imola performance that they gave
    him the machine and he's since de-
    tailed it out, polishing and chroming
    it into a potential show winner any-
    where . . . unlike some of the first
    models which came to America.
    American motorcycle enthusiasts
    are accustomed to looking at V-
    twins. Ever since the early 1900s the
    most popular motorcycles have been
    of V-twin configuration. The remain-
    ing American manufacturer, Harley-
    Davidson, uses the V-twin even today
    in its Sportster and 74-cubic-inch
    machines, and there is a great deal
    to be said for the design. A large-
    capacity V-twin may be kept very
    narrow and can be placed well down
    in the frame to lower the machine's
    center of gravity . . . important to
    good handling.
    Most V-twins have been of the
    "narrow-angle" design; that is, hav-
    ing an angle of less than 90 degrees
    between the cylinders. For example,
    the Harley-Davidsons use a 45-
    degree angle, the Indian V-twins had
    a 42-degree difference between the
    cylinder bore centerlines and per-
    haps the most revered V-twin of re-
    cent years, the Vincent, boasted a
    50-degree angle between cylinders.
    A few difficulties arise from such a
    design, and these include the fact
    that the front cylinder partially blocks
    the cooling airflow to the rear cylin-
    der. For high-performance applica-
    tions this is less than ideal, but there
    have been some exceptions to this.
    The most notable is probably the
    Vincent which has the connecting
    rods mounted side-by-side which ne-
    cessitated that the cylinders be offset
    slightly. With the rear cylinder's ex-
    haust pipe facing the front of the
    motorcycle, and that cylinder being
    offset to the right-hand side (as
    viewed from the saddle by the rider),
    rear cylinder cooling becomes much
    better.
    With "wide-angle" V-twins (with
    90-degrees or more between the cyl-
    inders) the cooling problems cease
    to exist, but others arise. The Ducati,
    for example, features a vertical cylin-
    der and a horizontal one, with nei-
    ther obstructing the other's cooling
    air flow. But there’s a styling difficulty
    because the horizontal cylinder has
    cooling fins that are just "back-
    wards” to the ones on the vertical
    cylinder. This problem confronts the
    stylist who must make the motorcycle
    aesthetically pleasing to the buying...
    13904-AL-7509-02