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Ducati 750 Sport
 

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Make Model

Ducati 750 Sport

Year

1972 - 73

Engine

Four stroke, 90°“L”twin cylinder, SOHC, 2 valves per cylinder, bevel gear driven

Capacity

748 cc / 45.6 cu-in
Bore x Stroke 80 x 74.4 mm
Compression Ratio 9.3:1

Induction

2 x Dell'Orto PHF 32A carburetors
Cooling System Air cooled

Spark Plugs

Marelli CW 260T, Lodge 3HN

Ignition

Points and coil
Battery Yuasa 12N-12A-4A-12V
Starting Kick

Max Power

45.6 kW / 62 hp @ 8200 rpm

Clutch

Wet, multiplate

Transmission 

5 Speed 
Primary Drive Ratio 2.448:1 (29/71)
Gear Ratios 1st 2.237 / 2nd 1.562 / 3rd 1.203 / 4th 1.000 / 5th 0.887:1
Final Drive Ratio 2.250:1 (16/36)
Final Drive Chain

Frame

Tubular steel, twin downtube

Front Suspension

38 mm Marzocchi fork

Rear Suspension

Dual shocks, Marzocchi 305 mm, 3-way adjustable

Front Brakes

Single 275 mm disc, Lockheed caliper

Rear Brakes

200 mm Drum

Front Tyre

3.25 - 19

Rear Tyre

3.50 - 18 or 4.10 - 18
Dimensions Length  2200 mm / 86.6 in
Width      710 mm / 28.0 in
Height  1070 mm / 42.1 in
Wheelbase 1530 mm / 60.2 in
Seat Height 780 mm / 30.7 in

Dry Weight

182 kg / 401 lbs

Fuel Capacity 

17 Litres / 4.5 US gal / 3.7 Imp gal

Top Speed

210 km/h / 131 mph

Colours

Black frame, yellow and black

The Ducati 750 Sport is an exceedingly rare motorcycle that sits squarely between its two more famous siblings – the Ducati 750 GT and the Ducati 750 Super Sport (SS). Put simply, the Ducati 750 Sport (also known as the 750S) was a higher-performance version of the slightly more consumer-friendly 750 GT.

The 750 Sport is slightly more powerful than the GT and it could be ordered with a half fairing and twin front disc brakes if required – making it a popular choice for privateer racers in Europe in the early 1970s.
The Ducati 750 L-Twin

The Ducati 750 Sport first appeared in 1972, it was the fastest and most powerful road-legal motorcycle ever built by Ducati up until that point, and it was designed to compete squarely with both the Japanese and the British.

Ducati was still relatively new to the superbike game in 1972, they had only produced their first L-twin a year earlier in 1971. Prior to this the company had made a name for themselves selling beautifully designed, smaller-capacity motorcycles.

The engine design followed somewhat in the footsteps of the V-twin used in the Vincent Black Shadow, in that Italian engineer Fabio Taglioni had taken two single cylinder barrels and heads and modified them to fit onto a newly designed crankcase – in much the same way that Phil Irving had done all those years earlier.

The genius of this design strategy is that you take proven, pre-existing heads and valve trains, as well as barrels, pistons, and connecting rods. This simplifies the process of designing a new engine considerably, and means you can use a pre-existing parts supply. Of course the actual design was modified somewhat, particularly the heat sink fins on the barrels of the front-facing cylinder, which were changed to make better use of the airflow coming from above the heads in the cylinder’s new orientation.

Despite its relative newness, the 748cc Ducati twin was an almost immediate success. Racing icon Paul Smart rode his Ducati 750 Imola Desmo to a hugely popular win at the 1972 Imola 200 with Bruno Spaggiari in second place on a matching Ducati. It’s difficult to describe how important this win was at the time, it helped to launch Ducati from a well-known maker of smaller-engined motorcycles to endurance race winning superbike manufacturers.

The production version of the 750 Imola Desmo was the Ducati 750 GT, it was fitted with a regular valve train rather than the desmodromic design used on the race bike for the sake of consumer-friendliness. The 750 GT produced 57 hp and proved popular with motorcyclists, helping to slow the Japanese invasion slightly, and establishing Ducati as a world-class builder of road-going superbikes.

The Ducati 750 Sport was designed to fill the gap between the Imola 200 winning 750 Imola Desmo and the 750 GT.

In order to squeeze a little more power out of the L-twin the compression ratio was increased and a pair of larger 32mm Dell’Orto PHF carburetors were fitted with no filters – just a wire mesh over the velocity stacks.

As a hat-tip to its performance intentions the 750 Sport was given clip-on handlebars and rear sets, buyers could also opt for a half fairing and twin front disc brakes. Most examples left the factory wearing bright yellow paint work, and all were fitted with side covers bearing the “750 Sport” branding.

With a total weight of 182 kilograms (401 lbs), 62 hp, and a top speed approaching 130 mph the model proved desirable – though Ducati didn’t build all that many of them as they tried to keep up with demand for the less expensive 750 GT.

Source silodrome.com