1971 Ducati Silver Shotgun

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The Ducati Silver Shotgun.
The Ducati Silver Shotgun.
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In keeping with the Silver Shotgun's sporting nature, large tachometer overshadows small speedometer housed in the headlamp shell. The black knob below the tach is the steering friction damper.
In keeping with the Silver Shotgun's sporting nature, large tachometer overshadows small speedometer housed in the headlamp shell. The black knob below the tach is the steering friction damper.
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Nearly stock, the bike maintains its factory tire pump.
Nearly stock, the bike maintains its factory tire pump.
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A single 29mm Dell'Orto VHB with an aluminum trumpet feeds the Ducati's fuel/air charge.
A single 29mm Dell'Orto VHB with an aluminum trumpet feeds the Ducati's fuel/air charge.
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The bevel drive cover on top of the cylinder head is a Ducati signature.
The bevel drive cover on top of the cylinder head is a Ducati signature.
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This Silver Shotgun was painstakingly disassembled and its frame painted a distinct-yet-familiar hue of green (the same as used on Ducati's famous 750SS). Nearly stock, the bike maintains its factory rearsets.
This Silver Shotgun was painstakingly disassembled and its frame painted a distinct-yet-familiar hue of green (the same as used on Ducati's famous 750SS). Nearly stock, the bike maintains its factory rearsets.
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Ducati Silver Shotgun.
Ducati Silver Shotgun.

Ducati Silver Shotgun

Years produced: 1971-72
Total production: N/A
Claimed power: 27hp @ 6,700rpm
Top speed: 98mph
Engine type: Overhead cam, air-cooled single
Weight (dry): 130kg (286lb)
Price then: $1,300 (1972, est.)
Price now: $3,500-$5,500
MPG: 40-60

The story of this particular Ducati Silver Shotgun begins on a quiet street in the foothills of the North Shore Mountains in Vancouver, British Columbia, where I meet Fritz Doernberger pulling up to his house after a bike ride — an unpowered ride, that is. The bicycle, of course, is Italian.

Why “of course?” Fritz is the organizer and mainstay of North Vancouver’s annual Italian Day at Waterfront Park, which typically hosts a couple hundred of Italy’s sweetest vehicular creations. He’s the omnipresent anchor of Vancouver’s monthly Italian night at Caffe Calabria on Commercial Drive, and except in the very direst weather, he’ll arrive on one of his gleaming classic Italian motorcycles. If Italian vehicles are drugs (like many Italophiles’ wives and girlfriends suspect), then Fritz is the “pusher man.”

He leads me through his basement, past his Alfa Romeo car flanked by a pair of “matching” orange Ducatis (a 1973 750 Sport and a 350 Desmo); a pack of Parillas; more Ducati singles; and finally a room full of racing bicycles. In the workshop, however, is the bike I’ve come to see: the penultimate version of the Ducati Desmo Mk3D with its unique fiberglass bodywork in silver metalflake. It’s the motorcycle Australia’s Two Wheels magazine nicknamed the “Silver Shotgun.”

  • Published on Jul 28, 2009
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