I purchased my first Ducati in 1993, a brand new 93 Supersport. I also owned a 95 900SS SP before moving to a 916, which I raced for several seasons in AFM, and which I still own. I always regretted selling the 2 valve machine and fixed that mistake by buying a used white frame (92) example about 7 years ago.
I bought it from he original owner who’d maintained it meticulously and made something of a “Superlight” tribute of it. It came with two sets of fairings, the common full fairing, and the “bikini” (or half fairing) that was commonly associated with the 750SS of the period and later, the “CR” model.
I had that half fairing on it when I bought it, and ran it that way for a while before replacing it with the full fairing. I wanted to go back to the half fairing and have mounted it, but I can’t recall which fairing hardware secures it at the back. I have the posts which I believe mount to the frame but for some reason they seem too long and push the tail end of the fairing out too far, but I am not certain.
Any 750SS or other half fairing Supersport owners out there have a photo or measurement of the length of the posts I’m describing to help me out?
Ciao,
TJ in the Santa Cruz Mountains
I bought it from he original owner who’d maintained it meticulously and made something of a “Superlight” tribute of it. It came with two sets of fairings, the common full fairing, and the “bikini” (or half fairing) that was commonly associated with the 750SS of the period and later, the “CR” model.
I had that half fairing on it when I bought it, and ran it that way for a while before replacing it with the full fairing. I wanted to go back to the half fairing and have mounted it, but I can’t recall which fairing hardware secures it at the back. I have the posts which I believe mount to the frame but for some reason they seem too long and push the tail end of the fairing out too far, but I am not certain.
Any 750SS or other half fairing Supersport owners out there have a photo or measurement of the length of the posts I’m describing to help me out?
Ciao,
TJ in the Santa Cruz Mountains