History
Photostory

History
Photostory

History
Photostory
Cucciolo (1946)

History
Photostory
Ducati 98 (1952)
Cruiser (1952)
Marianna (1954)
Siluro (Torpedo) (1956)
125 Triple Camshaft Desmo (1956)
Elite 200 (1958)

History
Photostory
250 Bicilindrico Hailwood (1960)
Scrambler (1961-74)
Apollo (1963)
Mach 1 (1965)
Mark 3 (1968)

History
Photostory
750 GT (The first Pompone) (1971)
500 GP (1971)
750 Imola (1972)
750 SS (1974)
900 Supersport (1978)
900 MHR (1979)

History
Photostory
TT2 (1980)
Pantah (1980)
F1 (1984)
750 F1 Specials (1986)
750 Paso (1986)
851 (1987)
906 Paso (1988)
907 I.E. (1989)
851 SBK (1989)

History
Photostory
851 SBK (1990)
888 SBK (1991)
888 SBK (1992)
Supermono (1993)
Monster
916 SBK (1995)
916 SBK (1996)
996 SBK (1999)

History
Photostory
THE PROTAGONIST

The Cruiser, the first scooter produced by the company.

1952 saw the birth of the futuristic Cruiser 175 cc, with an electric starter and automatic transmission. In 1953, Ducati unveiled an economic and spartan 98 cc, which was soon increased to 125 cc.

In 1954, a person arrived destined to become a myth in the motorcycle world: engineer Fabio Taglioni. Teacher at the “Tecniche” of Imola, Taglioni had already constructed motorcycles of original technical character and astonishing performance. The Taglioni design, avant-garde and non-conformist, was baptized at the races. From his debut at Ducati, the engineer tried to demonstrate the quality of his solutions, participating in long-distance races such as the Milano-Taranto and Giro d’Italia.


Mike “The Bike” Hailwood™, one of the best-loved and most successful of all the Ducati riders.

By the end of 1956, Ducati production included a four stroke Tourist 174 and Special and Sport models, capable of considerable performances (110-120-135 km/h).

At the 1957 Milan Salon, the above-mentioned models appeared together with an “America model.

During 1958, Ducati also produced the 200 cc “Elite. 1958 also marked the triumph of the desmodromic system, which engineer Taglioni had been developing since 1955. This project resulted in the famous twin-cylinder 250 cc of 1960, ordered from Ducati by the world famous English racer Mike Hailwoodä, who specifically requested a machine of “superior performance.