List of DUCATI Motorcycle Models
Ducati 2012
• DUCATI Diavel AMG Special Edition
• DUCATI Hypermotard 1100EVO SP
• DUCATI Hypermotard 1100EVO SP Corse Edition
• DUCATI Monster 1100 EVO
• DUCATI Multistrada 1200
• DUCATI Multistrada 1200S Touring
• DUCATI DUCATI Multistrada 1200S Sport Pikes Peak Special Edition
•
DUCATI Streetfighter 848 (6)
Ducati 2011
• DUCATI Diavel
• DUCATI Diavel Carbon
• DUCATI Hypermotard 796
• DUCATI Hypermotard 1100 EVO
• DUCATI Hypermotard 1100 EVO SP
• DUCATI Monster 696
• DUCATI Monster 796
• DUCATI Monster 1100
• DUCATI Monster 1100S
• DUCATI Multistrada 1200
• DUCATI Multistrada 1200S Sport
• DUCATI Multistrada 1200S Touring
• DUCATI Streetfighter
• DUCATI Streetfighter S
• DUCATI 848 EVO
• DUCATI 1198
• DUCATI 1198 SP
• DUCATI 1198R Corse Special Edition
Ducati 2010
•
DUCATI Hypermotard 796
•
DUCATI Hypermotard 1100 Evo (12)
•
DUCATI Monster 696 (4)
•
DUCATI Multistrada 1200 S (5)
•
DUCATI Multistrada 1200 (9)
•
DUCATI 848 Nicky Hayden Edition (5)
•
DUCATI Monster 1100
•
DUCATI 848
•
DUCATI 1198
•
DUCATI 1198 S (9)
Ducati 2009
•
DUCATI Hypermotard 1100 (4)
•
DUCATI Monster 696 (6)
• DUCATI Monster 1100
• DUCATI Multistrada 1100s
• DUCATI Multistrada
• DUCATI GT1000
• DUCATI GT Touring
• DUCATI Streetfigther
•
DUCATI 1098 R Bayliss LE
•
DUCATI 1198
•
DUCATI 1198S
• DUCATI Several
Ducati 2008
•
DUCATI Hypermotard 1100 (5)
• DUCATI Monster 696
• DUCATI Monster S2R
• DUCATI Monster S4R S
• DUCATI Monster S4R S Tricolore
• DUCATI Multistrada 1100
• DUCATI Multistrada 1100s
• DUCATI GT1000
•
DUCATI Superbike 1098 (3)
• DUCATI 1098S
•
DUCATI 848
•
DUCATI Superbike 1098R (1)
• DUCATI 1198S
•
DUCATI Desmosedici RR
Ducati 2007
• DUCATI Hypermotard
•
DUCATI Monster S4R Testastretta (8)
• DUCATI Multistrada 1100
• DUCATI Sport 1000 Biposto
• DUCATI Sport 1000 S
• DUCATI 1098
Ducati 2006
•
DUCATI HM Hypermotard Concept (9)
• DUCATI Monster 695
• DUCATI Monster S4Rs
• DUCATI GT1000
• DUCATI Desmosedici RR prototype
Ducati 2005
• DUCATI Monster 620
• DUCATI Monster 1000
• DUCATI Monster 1000S
• DUCATI Monster S2R
• DUCATI Multistrada 620
• DUCATI Multistrada 1000s DS
• DUCATI Multistrada
• DUCATI Paul Smart 1000 Limited Edition
• DUCATI Sport 1000
• DUCATI ST3
• DUCATI ST4s
•
DUCATI 749 (2)
• DUCATI 749 S
• DUCATI 999
• DUCATI 999R
• DUCATI 999S
Ducati 2004
• DUCATI Monster 620
• DUCATI Monster 620 Single Disc
• DUCATI Monster 800
• DUCATI Monster 1000S
• DUCATI Monster S4R
• DUCATI Multistrada 1000 DS
• DUCATI ST3
• DUCATI ST4s ABS
•
DUCATI 749 (1)
• DUCATI 749 S
• DUCATI 999
• DUCATI 999S
• DUCATI 800
• DUCATI 1000 DS
Ducati 1974
• DUCATI 750 SS
Ducati 1973
• DUCATI 750 Sport
Ducati 1972
• DUCATI 750 Imola
DUCATI
Ducati Motor Holding S.p.A. is a privately owned Italian motorcycle manufacturer located in Bologna, Italy. Ducati has achieved prominence in the motorcycle industry and in motorcycle racing.
In 1926, three brothers, Adriano, Marcello and Bruno Ducati, founded Societa Scientifica Radio Brevetti Ducati in Bologna to produce vacuum tubes, condensers and other radio components, becoming successful enough by 1935 to construct a new factory in the Borgo Panigale area of the city. Production was maintained during World War II, despite the Ducati factory being a repeated target for Allied bombing.
Meanwhile, at the small Turinese firm SIATA (Societa Italiana per Applicazioni Tecniche Auto-Aviatorie), Aldo Farinelli began developing a small pushrod engine for mounting on bicycles. Barely a month after the official liberation of Italy in 1944, SIATA announced its intention to sell this engine, called the "Cucciolo" (Italian for "puppy," in reference to the distinctive exhaust sound) to the public. The first Cucciolos were available alone, to be mounted on standard bicycles, by the buyer; however, businessmen soon bought the little engines in quantity, and offered complete motorized-bicycle units for sale.
In 1950, after more than 200,000 Cucciolos had been sold, in collaboration with SIATA, the Ducati firm finally offered its own Cucciolo-based motorcycle. This first Ducati motorcycle was a 60 cc bike weighing 98 lb (44 kg) with a top speed of 40 mph (64 km/h) had a 15 mm carburetor giving just under 200 mpg (85 km/L). Ducati soon dropped the Cucciolo name in favor of "55M" and "65TL".
When the market moved toward larger motorcycles, Ducati management decided to respond, making an impression at an early-1952 Milan show, introducing their 65TS cycle and Cruiser (a four-stroke motor scooter). Despite being described as the most interesting new machine at the 1952 show, the Cruiser was not a great success, and only a few thousand were made over a two-year period before the model ceased production.
In 1953, management split the company into two separate entities, Ducati Meccanica SpA and Ducati Elettronica, in acknowledgment of its diverging motorcycle and electronics product lines. Ducati Elettronica became Ducati Energia SpA in the eighties. Dr. Giuseppe Montano took over as head of Ducati Meccanica SpA and the Borgo Panigale factory was modernized with government assistance. By 1954, Ducati Meccanica SpA had increased production to 120 bikes a day.
In the 1960s, Ducati earned its place in motorcycling history by producing the then fastest 250 cc road bike available, the Mach 1.[7][8][9] In the 1970s Ducati began producing large-displacement L-twin (i.e. a 90° V-twin) motorcycles and in 1973, released an L-twin with the trademarked desmodromic valve design. In 1985, Cagiva bought Ducati and planned to rebadge Ducati motorcycles with the lesser-known Cagiva name (at least outside of Italy). By the time the purchase was completed, Cagiva kept the "Ducati" name on its motorcycles. In 1996, Texas Pacific Group bought a 51% stake in the company for US$325 million; then, in 1998, bought most of the remaining 49% to become the sole owner of Ducati. In 1999, TPG issued an IPO of Ducati stock and renamed the company Ducati Motor Holding SpA. TPG sold over 65% of its shares in Ducati, leaving TPG the majority shareholder. In December 2005, Ducati returned to Italian ownership with the sale of Texas Pacific's stake (minus one share) to Investindustrial Holdings, the investment fund of Carlo and Andrea Bonomi.
From the 1960s to the 1990s, the Spanish company MotoTrans licensed Ducati engines and produced motorcycles that, although they incorporated subtle differences, were clearly Ducati-derived. MotoTrans's most notable machine was the 250 cc 24 Horas (Spanish for 24 hours).