A 1987 Ducati 750 Paso, prod #1090
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Manufacturer | Ducati |
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Production | 1986–1988; 4,863 sold |
Predecessor | Ducati 750 F1 Sport |
Successor | Ducati Paso 906 |
Class | Sport bike |
Engine | 748 cc air-cooled L-twin, single overhead cam desmodromic |
Bore / stroke | 88 x 61.5 mm |
Compression ratio | 10:1 |
Top speed | 131 mph |
Power | 72 hp @ 7,900 rpm |
Transmission | 5-speed |
Brakes | dual 11 in discs front, single 10 in disc rear |
Rake, trail | 25 degree rake, 4.1 in trail |
Wheelbase | 57.2 in |
Seat height | 30.6 in |
Weight | 429 lbs (dry) 484 lbs (wet) |
Fuel capacity | 5.8 gal |
The Ducati Paso was introduced in 1986 with the slogan "Il nostro passato ha un grande futuro" (Our past has a great future). The name was in honour of racer Renzo Pasolini, nicknamed "Paso", who died on 20 May 1973 in an accident at the Monza race track during the Italian motorcycle Grand Prix (Gran Premio motociclistico d'Italia).
The Cagiva (from CAstiglioni GIovanni VArese) company, founded by the Castiglioni brothers, needed an engine – while Ducati, who had just been released from a difficult past of statutory public management (IRI), needed revenue.
Over a series of Italian style meetings/lunches in 1984, they agreed a deal for Ducati to supply engines to Cagiva – and then go out of the business of producing motorcycles. However, the Castiglioni brothers of Cagiva were eventually offered a deal to buy Ducati, subject to the Ducati name living on as an actual motorcycle product. On closure of the deal, Ducati engines were instantly installed in a number of Cagiva bikes, which included the Alazzurra and the Elefant enduro bike.
At the time of the takeover, due to its financial difficulties Ducati was in a state of suspended animation with regards to engineering development. By that time, the classic bevel drive V-twin, which was old and expensive to produce, had been replaced by the belt-drive Pantah, designed by Fabio Taglioni. The Pantah was already known to be a strong and capable engine, and known to deliver in the Ducati 750 F1.
The Pantah engine is equipped with desmodromic valves and has been constantly developed up to the present day. And around it Cagiva wanted a Ducati motorcycle unlike any other, that showed the world both Ducati's capabilities, and where it would go in the future.
The challenge consisted in constructing a bike with innovative technical characteristics and image to fight the intense Japanese competition. To undertake the ambitious objective Ducati hired Massimo Tamburini, co-founder of Bimota. Tamburini would go on to design the Ducati 916 and MV Agusta F4 series, included in the Guggenheim Museum's The Art of the Motorcycle exhibition of 1988–1999, and the MV Agusta Brutale series.