MCN

THE WORLD’S GREATEST BIKES #12 DUCATI SUPERMONO

Bologna’s last single-cylinder sportsbike is a real racing unicorn

- By Emma Franklin DEPUTY EDITOR

Ducati lay claim to some of motorcycli­ng’s most desirable and exclusive models. Yet one sits above all else in terms of scarcity, mystique, and value: the 1993 Supermono.

Small, stunning and saturated with exotic materials, the 549cc production racer was designed to showcase Ducati’s technical prowess in single-cylinder racing, and show how far modern materials and methods could evolve the most basic of four-stroke configurat­ions.

An instant winner, the Supermono took victory in its first year of competitio­n, clinching the 1993 European Supermono championsh­ip in the hands of Italian Mauro Lucchiari. In 1995 it won at the Isle of Man TT, Kiwi Robert Holden giving Ducati their eighth and, to date, last TT victory.

It was to be more than just a race bike, too, as a road-going version was also promised.

However, despite its appeal and racing success, the Supermono project was snuffed out after just two years, and only 67 examples were built. The long-awaited road bikes were never seen.

It’s because of this unfulfille­d promise and unicorn-like rarity that Supermonos today command prices upwards of £100,000.

Ducati’s Chief Engineer Massimo Bordi got the concept underway in 1990, creating a 487cc single from the 90-degree V-twin of the firm’s World Superbike-winning 888, complete with desmo valve train and electronic fuel injection. Bordi’s prototype kept both cylinders but used only the vertical bore to provide power; the horizontal was run without a head so that its piston acted as a balancer to cancel out the vibes that typically plagued singles.

Although it proved as smooth as a V-twin, the extra drag of the dummy piston resulted in power losses which forced the engineer back to the drawing board.

His solution was to amputate the dummy piston and simply make use of a double conrod set-up. Known as ‘doppia bielletta’, it worked by adding a lever joined at right angles to the small end of the balance conrod, with the other end of the lever fixed to the crankcase. It not only kept the things smooth, it also negated the previous design’s frictional losses, while resulting in a more compact engine. The added upshot for the rider was that, as it was essentiall­y a ‘crossplane’ single, it provided glorious traction. Further refinement saw the bore increase to 100mm, whilst stroke was increased by a further 2mm to 70mm to create 549cc and a peak power of 75bhp at 10,500rpm.

Developmen­t of the Supermono was then placed in the hands of a young project lead named Claudio Domenicali. Now the firm’s CEO, in the early 90s Domenicali was fresh out of university and in his first major role with Ducati.

With the motor tamed of vibes, the developmen­t team could use the engine as a stressed member allowing the frame to be both extremely stiff whilst also remaining lightweigh­t. The blend of 22mm and 16mm diameter steel tubes resulted in a frame that weighed just 6kg, reputedly the highest stiffness-to-weight ratio of any Ducati produced at the time.

Other chassis delights included magnesium triple clamps, racespec Öhlins, 280mm Brembo discs, and lashings of carbon-fibre.

With just three months before it was due to be revealed, Pierre Terblanche then gave the monocylind­ric masterpiec­e its supermodel looks in his debut project as a young designer.

The world got its first glimpse of the Supermono at the 1992 Cologne show – alongside another key Ducati, the game-changing M900 Monster – the popularity of which was the likely reason why the promised roadgoing Supermono never came to fruition.

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 ?? ?? Rob Holden won the 1995 Singles TT
Rob Holden won the 1995 Singles TT
 ?? ?? The ‘Mono was a corner-carving joy
The ‘Mono was a corner-carving joy

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