Cycle News

Cycle News 2019 Issue 36 September 10

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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916 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE DUCATI 916 P82 Feature That success was many and varied. Indeed, between 1994 and 1998, the machine badged the 916, took four WorldSBK titles (three to Briton Carl Fogarty and one to Australian Troy Corser), as well as countless race wins in European, American and Australasian The 1994 and 1995 models were adorned with the "Ducati 916" lettering, which was dropped for 1997 onwards. (Below) Analog at its finest. Not a digital gauge to be found. superbike competition. Fogarty is considered the Godfather of the 916. Of the 55 WorldSBK races won by Ducati during the 916/996/998's tenure, Fogerty captured 43 of them, making it the most successful machine and rider pairing in WorldSBK history. This year marks the 25th anniversary since the 1994 Ducati 916 debuted on the world stage and promptly moved the super- bike goal posts. I want to acknowledge Cycle News contributor Jon Urry for his assistance in creating this article and Ian Falloon for his book, Ducati 916, that was used extensively for research purposes. Before the 916 Before you begin to think about the 916, you need to go back to 1985 and the creation of the first four-valve Desmodromic V-twin, created by Massimo Bordi. Ducati had just gone through a change of ownership from the state-subsidized VM Group control to become the property of Ca- giva, located north of Varese and headed by Claudio Castiglioni and his brother Gianfranco. Castiglioni inherited a company with a vast history of glorious two-valve, bevel-drive Desmo V-twins, the design of which was headed by the legendary Fabio Taglioni. Beautiful as they were, the bevel-drive twins were antiquated by the early 1980s, strug- gling to match the power output of the new breed of four-cylinder superbikes coming from Japan.

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