Australian Motorcyclist

FANCY PANTS Dust off your Sunday best

WE KNOW THIS IS an overseas event but if you had the chance to zip off over to London and sample some of the finest motorcycles (and cars) running around, we bet you wouldn’t hesitate to dust off your Sunday best. So, while just about most of us will be only viewing this online, how about we dream of being there anyway…

The London Concours, presented by Montres Breguet, has announced that this June’s event will feature a selection of two wheeled stars from the most iconic and evocative motorcycle brand of all, with its ‘Ode to Ducati’ Ducati. Spanning close to 50 years of the Italian marque’s illustrious history, the remarkable collection of bikes will wow alongside the Concours’ breath-taking array of four wheeled machinery – from spectacular supercars to the finest classics-on the immaculate lawns of the Honourable Artillery Company in the heart of the city.

The wonderful selection of motorcycles from the Bolognese manufacturerDucati’s longstanding chief designer and technical director-was tasked with building a 750-class bike to compete with the likes of Moto Guzzi, Laverda and of course the Japanese giants. The move into the 750 class was viewed as crucial to the success of the marque; a gateway to significant sales volumes in the USA. Taglione’s proposed low-cost solution was to blend two of Ducati’s well proven small capacity ‘singles’ onto a common crank case, creating a 90-degree V, or “L Twin” as he termed it. The 750 GT, widely praised by journalists in period for its smooth power and sharp handling, represents the genesis of Ducati’s illustrious lineage of V-Twin machines. In order to get production going as quickly as possible, the very early bikes had engines with sandcast cases and many other detail features not seen on the series production machines, which featured die-cast motors. Just 400 out of a total production of some 4,000 GT’s were built this way before the revised “square cased” engine was introduced in 1975. Relatively few of these early bikes have survived, with a small handful at most to be found in the UK. One not to miss.

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