Showing posts with label Ducati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ducati. Show all posts

3 Oct 2014

Volkswagen XL Sport - It's The XL1 With A Ducati Engine

VW's XL1 costs a fortune and is slow but returns over 300mpg.  Of more interest to petrolheads will be the XL Sport which is much, much faster

Volkswagen XL Sport
Volkswagen XL Sport

VW is lucky to have a boss of the calibre of Ferdinand Piech. As an engineer he worked on the Porsche 906 and Audi Quattro and as boss of VW he bought Lamborghini, Bentley, Porsche and Ducati and revived the Bugatti marque with the Veyron.

Volkswagen's XL1 is a carbon bodied, ultra-light, ultra-economical hybrid car with a 2-cylinder diesel engine.  To spice it up a bit Piech has been talking for some time about sticking a Ducati motorcycle engine in the XL1 because, well, because at his heart he's a petrol head.

The XL Sport is that realisation, and the engine isn't any old Ducati lump, it's the 1199cc wide angle V-Twin from the 1199 Superleggera superbike and it has 195bhp.  The gearbox is a 7-speed DSG automatic.

The XL1 weighs 795kg which will increase a little with the Ducati engine in the XL Sport but its power is enough to transform the car's performance. Top speed is 168mph and 0-60mph takes 5.2 seconds.

250 units will be built and the price has yet to be released. You can bet it'll sell out as soon as it goes on sale.


Volkswagen XL Sport

Volkswagen XL Sport

Volkswagen XL Sport

Volkswagen XL Sport

Volkswagen XL Sport
Volkswagen XL Sport

Volkswagen XL Sport
Volkswagen XL Sport

By Matt Hubbard




2 Oct 2014

2015 Ducati Scrambler

Ducati has revealed the new Scrambler range which will be available in 2015

Ducati Scrambler Urban Enduro

The original Ducati Scrambler was dropped in 1968. In 2015 the bike will be relaunched as a kind of retro-inspired but thoroughly modern bike.

The engine is an 803cc V-twin taken from the Monster 796 with an output of 75bhp.  Four versions of the Scrambler will be available with the Icon, the standard model, in yellow and red.

The Urban Enduro is painted 'Wild Green', the Full Throttle has a black tank and the Classic gets spoked wheels and metal mudguards, much like the original Scrambler.

Prices are likely to start from £7,000 and the first models will be in Ducati dealers in January 2015
Ducati Scrambler Icon

Ducati Scrambler Full Throttle

Ducati Scrambler Classic

By Matt Hubbard


23 Jun 2014

Bike Racing At Castle Combe And Meeting John McGuinness - The Perfect Sunday

Last Sunday I went to watch the Castle Combe Grand National Motorcycle Race Meeting.  It was a brilliant day.

Castle Combe Grand National Motorcycle Race Meeting

Looking for something to do on a sunny summer Sunday I checked the internet. Local to me were a Porsche day at Beauliea or bike racing at Castle Combe.  Racing won out over static displays so I headed on down to Castle Combe on the bike on Sunday.

I avoided the M4 and rode my Triumph Street Triple along the A4 through Hungerford, Marlborough and Chippenham. 60 miles in 60 minutes and a fantastic ride.  The day had started well.

I hadn't realised it but the race meet was the first two day motorcycle meeting at Castle Combe in a decade.  There would be racing all day on Saturday and Sunday with varied and packed fields, and there were a couple of big names demonstrating classic bikes.

It was only the second time I'd ever been to Castle Combe and the first time was for a steam and vintage rally.  It's a wonderful little circuit.  I parked the bike up and 30 yards later was on the grass banking overlooking Quarry Corner.  

It was lunchtime and I was starving so I walked slowly around the corner as the morning's penultimate race was taking place, found a burger stand and paid only £4 for a massive bacon cheeseburger. 

The last race before lunch was called Sound of Thunder.  The bikes were loud and the leaders raced for all they were worth.  Next up was a demonstration of some old bikes. 

Woah! John McGuinness on Mike Hailwood's old 6-cylinder Honda with Steve Parrish on a 500cc Honda 4 and David Hailwood on his dad's Ducati 900.

Afterwards the track went quiet for lunch so I wandered down through the paddocks to the pits.  The paddocks stretched out over three fields. With so many races and so many racers there were bikes, gazebos, vans, tents and blokes in racing leathers sitting in deck chairs everywhere.

Petrolhead nirvana. All race paddocks should be like this.

I found the race control building and went to check out the race paddock. Oh. My. God. There was John McGuinness.  He, Steve Parrish and David Hailwood were chatting with the press and marshals. After a few minutes they all came out of the race paddock and John McG was besieged by fans.  He stopped to talk with people, sign autographs and even shook hands with people who asked. 

He seemed a thoroughly decent bloke and had apparently spent 3 hours that morning sat at a trestle table signing autographs.
John McGuinness at Castle Combe Grand National Motorcycle Race Meeting

I watched the afternoon's racing at variously Folly, Avon Rise, Quarry and Farm straight.  All the viewing areas were great and the racing was superb, although a few of the back markers really shouldn't have been on track with some of the more experienced racers.

One chap was lapped on the second lap and didn't lean at all in to corners. Bit of a danger there, maybe he shouldn't be racing at all.

At the end of the afternoon we were all suntanned and had been blessed with a great day of racing and the presence of the greatest living motorcycle road racer.

A top day out.

I just wish I'd taken my camera instead of just my iPhone.  The photos could have been so much better.

John McGuinness and David Hailwood

Steve Parrish

David Hailwood on Mike Hailwood's Ducati 900
David Hailwood on Mike Hailwood's Ducati 900








By Matt Hubbard


7 Nov 2013

2014 Ducati Monster 1200 - Specs And Prices

This is the 2014 Ducati Monster 1200 which has an entirely new chassis and uses the 1198's engine


Having just seen the new Harley Davidsons and felt slightly sick it was rather good of Ducati to give us an antidote in the form of the new Monster 1200.

The lattice frame is much smaller than in earlier Monsters (the engine being a stressed member) and that exhaust pipework is a work of art.  The single sided swing arm remains.