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Ducati 60 Sport; Ducati 65 Sport; Ducati 65T; Ducati 65TL; Ducati 65TS; Ducati 98; Ducati 100 Scrambler; Ducati 125 Scrambler; Ducati 125 T; Ducati 125 TV; Ducati 239 Mark 3; Ducati 250 GT; Ducati 250 Mark 3; Ducati 250 Scrambler; Ducati 350 Mark 3; Ducati 350 Scrambler; Ducati 450 Mark 3; Ducati 450 Scrambler; Ducati 450 R/T; Ducati 748 ...
A Suzuki GSX-R1000 at a drag strip – a 2006 model once recorded a 0 to 60 mph time of 2.35 seconds. This is a list of street legal production motorcycles ranked by acceleration from a standing start, limited to 0 to 60 mph times of under 3.5 seconds, and 1 ⁄ 4-mile times of under 12 seconds.
The Ducati 350 Scrambler, also known in the US as the Ducati 350 SS and in Europe as the Ducati 350 SCR is an on/off-road 340 cc (21 cu in) single cylinder bevel drive SOHC motorcycle produced by the Italian manufacturer Ducati from 1968 to 1974. It was the first of the 'wide case' Ducati singles produced [2] and aimed at the American Market. [3]
A KTM dirt bike with a paddle tire. Off-road motorcycles, also known as dirt bikes or scramblers, specially designed for off-road use. The term off-road refers to driving surfaces that are not conventionally paved. These are rough surfaces, often created naturally, such as sand, gravel, a river, mud or snow.
The Ducati DesertX is a 937 cc (57.2 cu in) enduro from Ducati, released in 2022. It has a 110-horsepower (82 kW) V2 engine. [ 2 ] Claimed dry weight is 211 kilograms (465 lb).
The Ducati 1299 Panigale is a 1,285 cc (78.4 cu in) Ducati sport bike unveiled at the 2014 Milan Motorcycle Show and produced between 2015 and 2018 as a successor to the 1,198 cc (73.1 cu in) 1199. The motorcycle is named after the small manufacturing town of Borgo Panigale. [4] The 1299 wheelbase remains the same at 1437 mm.
The Ducati Panigale V4 is a sport bike with a 1,103 cc (67.3 cu in) desmodromic 90° V4 engine introduced by Ducati in 2018 as the successor to the V-twin engined 1299.A smaller engine displacement version complies with the Superbike category competition regulations which state "Over 750 cc up to 1000 cc" for three and four cylinder 4-stroke engines.
Ducati had introduced the 350 Sebring in 1967 at the request of their American importer Berliner Motor Corporation (the US was Ducati's primary market at the time). [7] The Sebring was an enlargement of the existing 250 cc model but designer Fabio Taglioni had concerns about the reliability of the bottom end, so the Sebring was produced in a mild state of tune.