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        Ducati 1000SS DS
 
 After more than three decades of design development, the Ducati Supersport is considered an icon in the modern motorcycling world with a reputation for great handling, smooth power delivery, versatility and light weight. For 2005, the Ducati Supersport 1000 carries the family heritage proudly into the future while adhering to and improving on the time-tested formula of its predecessors. Confidence-inspiring and built with quality throughout, the 
    Supersport models are a great way to enter the world of Ducati sport 
    motorcycles. The air-cooled engine expresses the essential practical and 
    pragmatic Ducati philosophy and has significant design and application 
    advantages.  Features & Benefits Supersport 1000 DS: Easy to handle but high in performance, it sports a powerful 992 cc Dual Spark fuel-injected Desmo engine, an advanced trellis frame, and superior suspension to ensure top of the line performance and handling. Confidence-inspiring and built with quality throughout, the Supersport models are a great way to enter the world of Ducati sport motorcycles. In all, the 1000 DS is the most advanced air-cooled Ducati Desmo engine ever designed. Review 
Looking at the 1000DS, it is quite easy to trace its 
heritage right back, through the obvious SuperSport range of the late nineties 
and early noughties, back through the lost years of the early nineties when 
Ducati really weren't all they could have been and all the way back to the mid 
eighties when the Pantah broke new ground by being a Ducati sportsbike that was 
both mechanically quite up to date and electrically quite robust. Belt driven 
cams, oil level sight glasses and electronic ignition may all be pretty much the 
norm now, but back in 1984 they were a revelation. Perhaps I should explain. I raced bevel drive Ducatis in the eighties, and the racebikes were derived from the 900SS road bikes. But obviously they were streets apart in reality. The roadbikes were from an era where good suspension simply meant that there was very little movement. The frames were fairly rigid but there was enough flex at either end to necessitate the best handling bikes being fitted with rock hard shock absorbers that would probably contravene the Trades Description Act if sold today. A fast bike in the mid eighties was generally very harsh and didn't work very well on bumpy roads. It would also be incredibly slow steering to make up for the inherent deficiencies of the suspension and tyres. But a good racebike, on the other hand, needed to work on all sorts of surfaces. The ride wouldn't be plush by any means but the suspension would be very well controlled and would take up a lot of bumps because otherwise the bike wouldn't get its power down properly. The swingarm would be heavily braced, likewise the forks, and the tyres would be far better than road rubber. Finally, the racebike would probably be 15-20% lighter than the road bike. 
				 
 Which is pretty close to what the 1000DS gives you. To the extent that I felt instantly and completely at home on it. Swinging a leg over it is easy because although quite wide it is also fairly low, and once in the seat you are rewarded by a view that couldn't be anything other than a Ducati. Two white faced round clocks in a black crackle finish panel with a neat cluster of idiot lights above them. And no redline on the tacho. The bars are a fair reach away but are positioned to fall immediately and comfortably to hand once you adopt "the position." In this case, with the pegs set high enough to provide acres of Ground Clearance while low enough to avoid cramp, the position is quite a comfortable one and means that you can carry someone other than your osteopath on the pillion seat. Which reminds me. The pillion seat. There is one, and it is actually quite usable. 
For some odd reason, people always seem to complain 
about Ducati mirrors. I have two issues with this. First of all, if you want 
fantastic rear view mirrors you don't buy a committed sportsbike because they 
just don't have them. And secondly, I've never had a problem getting an adequate 
rear view on a Ducati. But the DS should satisfy the critics anyway, because the 
mirrors, although they look like something of an afterthought, are brilliant. 
The lights are fine as well, with the single big headlamp providing a 
comfortably wide spread of light and a good high beam, though personally I'd 
still like a second bulb in there because you can't have too much illumination 
in my view. Finally, while we're talking about practical things, the 
conventional exhausts mean that yes, there is storage space under the seat. 
 
While we are talking about making brisk progress, it's probably worth mentioning 
handling. I've been wracking my brains since I got off the bike trying to think 
of the right word to describe the handling of this bike. And the best I can come 
up with is this. Fantastic. You may be able to do better linguistically but 
you'll be very hard pushed to find a bike with better real world handling then 
the 1000DS. It's all part of the overall package, I think. A soft power delivery 
with an extremely rigid frame and very high quality suspension, courtesy of 
Ohlins at the back, make for a bike that simply does exactly what you ask of it, 
when you ask it. But it does it with such great dollops of spirit that there is 
no way this bike could ever be accused of being clinical or over-efficient in 
the way that some other equally capable machines are. One more thing on 
handling. The 1000DS is perfectly happy to go round corners with your knees and 
elbows scraping the ground like Reuben Xaus or tucked in and tidy like Geoff 
Duke. It seems to make no difference to your speed, at least on the road, 
whether you hang off or not. If anything, to me at least, a bike like this 
actually looks better if you aren't completely hanging off it but have just 
shifted your weight enough to look as though you mean business. Source: Motorbikes Today
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