I'm sure they're great bikes, but 'practical'? My Miatas are great fun too, but practical? Hardly.
It would be hilarious to see a Monster with a milk crate strapped on the back fender...
You just gotta get calibrated.
Compare to that Panigale 1299S: ride that thing for half an hour in stop&go traffic and your back will ache, your wrists will hurt, and the clutch will be smoldering ruins. Try and turn it around in a parking lot and you will look foolish. The Monster, on the other hand, is a delight to split lanes with and the ergos won't hurt you.
You want to carry a family of five and a chicken thru downtown Phnom Penh? Get a scooter. But if you want to do some urban hooliganism it's a good choice.
The ad copy is hilarious. 'everyday functionality'?
Don't laugh, Monsters are really practical bikes. Good ergonomics, fantastic handling. You won't deliver pizzas with them but for a solo urban adventure they're a blast.
What about the solo urbane adventurist? Asking for a discerning friend...
Well spotted, sir! The Anniversario is pretty rare. The exhaust is an Akropovic, an aftermarket maker popular in Yurp but pretty rare statesideâavailable in the factory racing kit I gather. Which is a change from recent practice; Ducati used to favor Termignoni exhausts for its kits.
And it is indeed a desmosediciâdesmodromic valves, sixteen of 'em, on top of four cylinders.
Sadly these things are so spendy that very few of them ever turn a wheel on street or track. Ducati could probably sell limited-edition bikes without engine internals and most collectors would never know.
Unfortunately true of most of the special editions. There is a guy in town who has a Desmosedici RR but he rides the heck out of it. It has rock chips, scratches and smashed bugs all over (bugs only on the front). Also brake dust and chain grease on the wheels. Pretty impressive for a bike that was North of $70K. He's an interesting guy who also has an Italian boat, he is from Romania - and everything you would expect give those data points. The sound that V4 machine makes is wonderful, I'd even say better than the Honda V4s.
The ad copy is hilarious. 'everyday functionality'?
Don't laugh, Monsters are really practical bikes. Good ergonomics, fantastic handling. You won't deliver pizzas with them but for a solo urban adventure they're a blast.
I'm sure they're great bikes, but 'practical'? My Miatas are great fun too, but practical? Hardly.
It would be hilarious to see a Monster with a milk crate strapped on the back fender... c.
The ad copy is hilarious. 'everyday functionality'?
Don't laugh, Monsters are really practical bikes. Good ergonomics, fantastic handling. You won't deliver pizzas with them but for a solo urban adventure they're a blast.
This one didn't sell at 24K$, which sort of surprises me. I've seen the non-anniversario Panigale 1299s in the low/mid teens. It's not a Desmosedici after all...
Well spotted, sir! The Anniversario is pretty rare. The exhaust is an Akropovic, an aftermarket maker popular in Yurp but pretty rare stateside—available in the factory racing kit I gather. Which is a change from recent practice; Ducati used to favor Termignoni exhausts for its kits.
And it is indeed a desmosedici—desmodromic valves, sixteen of 'em, on top of four cylinders.
Sadly these things are so spendy that very few of them ever turn a wheel on street or track. Ducati could probably sell limited-edition bikes without engine internals and most collectors would never know.