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Wrooom 2013 Photos | Ducati.net

Wrooom 2013 Photos | Ducati.net | Ductalk | Scoop.it

Nicky Hayden, Andrea Dovizioso and the Ducati Corse Team have arrived at Wrooom 2013 (in an Audi of course!) and we will be posting the photos to a gallery as they become available.  To see the WROOOM 2013 Gallery click HERE

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Ducati.net will be adding more photos daily To Photos.Ducati.net, so save this link!

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The Desmo Story | Italy’s Museo Prunaro Deconstructs Desmodromics | Alan Cathcart | Motorcyclist Magazine

The Desmo Story | Italy’s Museo Prunaro Deconstructs Desmodromics | Alan Cathcart | Motorcyclist Magazine | Ductalk | Scoop.it

  Though motorcyclists typically associate desmodromics with Italian Ducatis, the term doesn’t have Latin roots.


WORDS: Alan Cathcart
PHOTOS: Kel Edge
Though motorcyclists typically associate desmodromics with Italian Ducatis, the term doesn’t have Latin roots. It’s actually derived from two Greek words: desmos, meaning controlled, and dromos, for the run, or track, an object follows. In engineering terms, it refers to a valvetrain that opens and closes its valves positively, using a solid lever mechanism instead of a spring. British engineer F. H. Arnott obtained the frst patents for a desmodromic valve system in 1910, and the frst practical application of the technology appeared in the Peugeot L76 racer that won the 1913 Indianapolis 500. But Ducati remains the only frm on two wheels or four to have successfully applied desmodromics to mass production.
It therefore makes sense that “Desmo Story,” a year-long exhibit chronicling the history of desmodromic valve actuation, is hosted by the Museo Prunaro in Budrio, 15 miles east of Ducati’s factory in Bologna. “Bologna was the Città Desmodromica in the 1950s, when no fewer than six different car and bike manufacturers in this area were working on desmo engine designs,” says Ducati’s Technical Director Gianluigi Mengoli, organizer of this exhibit. “I regarded it as a duty as well as a pleasure to help Ducati enthusiasts understand the history and development of the desmo concept.”

Read more: http://blogs.motorcyclistonline.com/the-desmo-story-20981.html#ixzz24oLOhdQx

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History of Desmodromic Valve Actuation Museum | Dr. Gigi Mengoli | Cycle World

History of Desmodromic Valve Actuation Museum | Dr. Gigi Mengoli | Cycle World | Ductalk | Scoop.it

Where would you expect a show about the history of desmodromic valve actuation to take place if not Bologna?  But Ducati wasn’t the driving force behind this comprehensive, well-managed initiative; rather, it was put together by one man: Dr. Gigi Mengoli.

Sure, Mengoli still is in a top position at Ducati, being chief project engineer and manager of design for production engines. But he did this show on his own because he loves the desmo concept and wanted to pay homage to all who contributed to its evolution—from the men at Peugeot who built the L76 four-cylinder based on the engine that won the 1912 Indianapolis 500 to the 2.5-liter Mercedes W196 inline-Eight by Daimler-Benz Chief Project Engineer Rudolf Uhlenhaut that dominated Formula One in 1954 and ’55 to the works of the great Dr. Fabio Taglioni, Mengoli’s teacher and inspiration....The whole story here:  http://www.cycleworld.com/2012/05/18/desmo-show/

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