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That engine is beautiful!
Now at $12,000...with 5 days still to GO! Wonder if it will his its *** RESERVE?!? ***
It should go for about double that, if not more. Me? I waited a year and bought the more modern 860GT which is worth about 1/3 (or less) than the '73 & 74's. I pick stocks with the same astuteness for any of you contrarians out there.
My friend has the same bike. Original paint (although faded), orange and black, on his. Electronic ignition. His older brother bought the bike new and sold it to him in the 1980s. Boy does it get attention when we are out for a ride!
Bevel Ducatis haven’t been reaching reserve on BaT.
Beautiful bike!It might be a '73 that got titled in '74.Here is an ad from 1973 with the exact same paint, and the same fork.'74 had a different fork. See below:Earlier fork, '72, early '73:Late '73, and '74 fork:
Same opinion here. Based upon the leading axle lowers on forks, it looks earlier to me, not a 74. Nearly 50 yrs offers lot of time to juggle parts.One of the most consistent things about early Ducatis is the inconsistency of the titled year vs the actual year model. Singles are even more prone to this issue than twins. hard parts are difficult to refute but it's not worth debating.
So if standing in the shower tearing up $100 bills gives the same sensation as yacht ownership, standing in the wind tearing up $100 bills is like having a vintage Ducati?
I owned one of the earliest GT's made. Last three engine number digits were 838 so in the first 1000 made. The sale bike has the earlier forks and the later kick start lever. Earlier bikes like mine had a lever that was a more right angle shape so a short straight section from the shaft then a more acute bend to the nearly vertical. Later arms were more a true banana shape. You can see the difference in these two images.Ciao
JoeW -- I noticed that your bike:and mine, have the fork tubes turned 180 degrees from each other.My bike was an amateur restoration (I bought it this way). Thankfully, the motor was done by Syd's Cycles. Everything else was done by the (late) previous owner.Digging around the interwebs, I'm seeing examples of both. Which is correct?
Seriously if I were buying a second hand bevel Ducati these days and I was wanting a first class engine and not some 3/4 worn out rebuilt unit I'd be budgeting on spending around $12-15,000 dollars in engine parts. I'd hate to front up the labour costs on top.
Many that you’d find in the US are relatively low mileage bikes/engines that have never had their cases split, so while they might be worn to some degree, they likely haven’t been previously overhauled. My SS would be one example. I overhauled my higher mileage Darmah engine myself and it wasn’t particularly expensive, except perhaps for the con rod kit (about $1000 today or a little more from Carrillo) I can’t remember what I did with the heads, maybe just new guides, and a valve job with existing valves. Pistons were not hugely expensive from what I recall and the cylinders were bored accurately by a local guy.
A rod kit might be a little less expensive in the US but this is was an easy link to find.https://www.ducati-kaemna.com/catalog/ducati-classics/crankshaft-connection-rod-ducati-classic/carrillo-pleuelsatz-20mm-900-koenigswelle.htmlI’d budget about $2500 USD for parts for a routine bevel Ducati engine overhaul, with a few unexpected odds and ends needing replacement as well as the expected, but not a blowup or replacing every part in the engine and gearbox. Most of the bikes here have 15-20K miles on them, give or take, they are not hammered to death.I have both an early LM and the SS, they’re both good bikes but the weight of the LM is an issue. It has however been an issue for 100,000 miles on the original engine and clutch etc. It’s a durable device.