Tag Archives: Ducati

Ducati and Lamborghini Teamed Up on a Limited $68,000 Streetfighter V4

That’s a lot of angry Italian metal.
Photo: Ducai

Usually, when you talk about brands inside the same family doing collaborations and crossovers, it’s lame. When those brands happen to be Ducati and Lamborghini, it ceases to be lame and starts being awesome.

Enter the Ducati Streetfighter V4 Lamborghini. It’s a very limited edition of the V4 S (which is already kind of a batshit nuts motorcycle) that takes a bunch of styling cues from the also bananas Lamborghini Huracan STO. It adds some other spicier bits to the Streetfighter formula for something truly desirable and over-the-top.

The Streetfighter V4 S is based on the Panigale V4 S, which means it’s packing a 200-plus horsepower 1,103-cc V4 engine, Ohlins electronic suspension and enough safety electronics to keep even the most ham-fisted rider from launching themselves into a low-Earth orbit. The Lamborghini edition adds a new Akrapovic underbody muffler, Lamborghini-like wheels and reworked body panels that draw inspiration from the Huracan STO’s hyper-aggressive styling.

The wheels even look like the STO’s wheels.
Photo: Ducati

The best part about this special Streetfighter is that it’s coming from the factory with a dry clutch. If you’re not a Ducati fan, you may wonder why that’s awesome. Basically, it makes the bike objectively worse to ride on the street, because it’s not as happy to slip, but makes the most insane, catastrophic sound. It’s like Satan’s own tambourine or a washing machine full of car accidents. It’s glorious.

This isn’t the first time this gruesome twosome of Italian performance vehicle manufacturers has teamed up, either. It’s definitely the coolest, though. The previous collab was on the 1260 Diavel Lamborghini, which drew inspiration from the Sian.

Ducati will be making just 630 examples for the public, with a further 63 examples for current Huracan STO owners that will match their cars. If you want one of these things, be prepared to pay exotic Italian prices for them. The “standard” Streetfighter V4 Lamborghini will retail for a wallet-scorching $68,000 and if you’re invited to buy one of the 63 specials, expect to pay $83,000.

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One Of The Hottest Ducatis Ever Has Been Trapped In This Crate For 20 Years

Photo: Bring a Trailer

This morning I’ve found myself doing my regular scrolls of car selling websites when I saw something that stopped me in my tracks. At first glance, it seemed that people were bidding up a wooden crate on Bring a Trailer for $35,000. Then it hit me, this isn’t just a crate. Beyond those wooden walls is an unassembled 2002 Ducati MH900e, one of the hottest Ducatis ever put on the road.

Ducati is known for creating functional art pieces and picking just one is at best a tortuous exercise. Some Ducati fans point at the 916 as the maker’s most beautiful. Others might toss the Panigale V4 out there. But if you want your heart to melt, one Ducati stands above them all: the MH900e.

Here, let me get your heart skipping like someone madly in love:

Now that I have your attention, you’re probably wondering why this early aughts machine looks like it jumped through time from the 1970s.

The MH900e started life as a sketch that was presented at the Internet Motorcycle Fair (INTERMOT) Show in 1998. As reported by Silodrome, Designer Pierre Terblanche took inspiration from the 900SS ridden to victory in the 1978 Isle of Man TT. That racebike was ridden to an unexpected win by none other than Mike Hailwood, a famed racer who had retired from mainstream racing for 11 years at the time. The MH900e pays homage to Hailwood’s 900SS and does so in impeccable style.

Ducati decided to gauge interest in the motorcycle by posting a questionnaire on its website. Remember, this was the late 1990s, when internet users listened to the wonderful sounds of dial-up modems and heard “you’ve got mail!” once they got online. A questionnaire back then was something different.

The public loved the MH900e and wanted their own, so Ducati decided to put the motorcycle into production, limiting it to just 2,000 units. In another departure from the norm, the MH900e was also sold online through Ducati’s website. Orders went live on January 1, 2000 at a minute after midnight. Despite the era being in the internet’s infancy the bike sold out in just 31 minutes.

One of them was packaged up in a crate and shipped off to Rockville Harley-Davidson in Gaithersburg, Maryland.

Photo: Bring a Trailer

If you’re wondering how a new Ducati ends up at a Harley dealership you aren’t alone. The dealership is a part of Battley Cycles, which includes BMW and Ducati.

The motorcycle has remained in its crate and unsold ever since. Peeking at the pictures in the Bring a Trailer listing, this MH900e is even still covered up in the plastic that it was wrapped in at the factory.

Photo: Bring a Trailer

Buried somewhere in that crate is an air-cooled 904cc Ducati 90-degreee L-twin. This engine is good for 74 hp and 56 lb-ft torque. That’s bolted to a trellis frame that uses the engine as a stressed member. The listing says that this motorcycle hasn’t been prepared for delivery in any way. In fact, the mileage on the odometer isn’t even known since nobody has bothered to power it up.

Should the buyer ever choose to crack open the crate and build the motorcycle, they’ll first find what appears to be some minor rubbing damage on the paint.

Photo: Bring a Trailer

That would be nothing in comparison to dealing with waking up a 20-year dormant engine. You’ll be dealing with all kinds of old rubber from the belts to all kinds of seals and hoses. And hopefully the engine itself isn’t stuck.

The MH900 Evoluzione cost about $18,000 when it was new, or $30,829 in today’s money. A 1,400-mile MH900e sold by the seller this month went for $41,000 while one with just 2 miles sold for $43,224. The price to get one still new in its crate? It’s currently $35,000 with six days to go on Bring a Trailer.

 

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The 2022 Kawasaki Z900RS SE Is A Modern Kawasaki Z1

Photo: Kawasaki

The Kawasaki Z900RS is getting an update for its next model year, and Kawasaki is thankfully making this new release more colorful than the last models in its retro lineup. This is a good thing, because even though I’m a big fan of the retro revival that bikes are currently enjoying, I would like to see more bike makers besides Ducati come out with splashy paint finishes.

The update to the Z900RS adds an SE to the model name, and a new “Yellow Ball” finish. It’s been announced in Europe only for now, but it could make its way to American roads. My fingers are crossed.

Photo: Kawasaki

The Z900RS SE has a few mechanical upgrades but it mostly just looks brighter. The non-cosmetic upgrades to the Z900RS are pretty good, and have to do mostly with the suspension and the braking components.

The new bike gets Öhlins shocks both front and rear. The rear shock features rebound damping and preload adjustability, while the front gets inverted forks, sporting the cool yellow finish we’ve come to associate with Öhlins. The new Brembo brakes have stainless-steel braided lines, but the calipers aren’t in their usual bright red finish. That’s fine here, because the new wheels already come in a beautiful gold tone. No need to clash colors.

The Z900RS SE remains as well-equipped as last year’s Z900RS. The 948cc inline-four engine is still there. Rider aids include traction control and an assist and slipper clutch. Don’t forget the ABS on the Brembos. Kawasaki says that the bike features a new “tuned” stainless steel exhaust system, but the exhaust note was already good to begin with.

The engine on this Kawi series is a screamer, for sure. It scared me half to death when I rode a Z900RS Cafe earlier this year. It’s an aggressive bike with a jumpy power band, and it lets you know that you’re essentially riding a kilo-bike. It’s 52ccs shy, but you can feel the latent horses at your wrist. The bike makes just under 110 horsepower and about 72 lb-ft of torque at 6,500 RPM.

My main gripe with that bike, other than it being too powerful, was its looks. It’s bad enough that our cars have become muted blobs without having to look at café racers wearing crossover color ways, like the boring slate of the bike I rode. The new Z900RS SE’s bright tones are a welcome change that nod to the bike’s heritage. Let’s hope Kawasaki brings this “Yellow Ball” styling to U.S. bikes, too.

Photo: Jalopnik / José Rodríguez Jr.

Photo: Kawasaki

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