100 MOTORCYCLETRADER
MACH TO MARK
Even with a more powerful alternator
(from 40 Watts to 60), the electrics
remained a cause for concern, with
the six-volt 25W headlight providing
illumination little better than a candle.
But with quality Marzocchi suspension
front and rear, a modest 116kg dry weight,
and a short 1350mm wheelbase, the Mach
1 could more than hold its own in the
handling department.
The brakes were generously
proportioned drums, a 180x35mm on the
front and 160x30mm on the rear, and the
wheels 18-inch with steel rims. These
components were shared with other 250cc
Ducati singles, but the Mach 1 was the
only one with a red frame and a wildly
optimistic 240km/h Veglia speedometer.
The 250 Mach 1 was fast and handled
well, but the big 29mm carb and high
compression contributed to difficult
starting and troublesome low-speed
running. This was ultimately the Mach 1’s
downfall as by the mid-1960s the Japanese
were beginning to produce 250s that were
equally fast, but were easier to start and
more user-friendly.
The Mach 1 continued through 1966
before another Mark 3 replaced it. It
shared the same highly tuned engine but
WANT TO KNOW MORE?
Get this book:
The book of the Ducati overhead
camshaft singles
Ellery.com.au/shop/the-
book-of-the-ducati-overhead-
camshaft-singles
A good Facebook group:
Facebook.com/groups/
ducatisingles
One of the best sites
for Ducati singles:
LaceyDucati.co.uk/ducati-parts
Another site devoted
to Ducati singles:
ClassicDucati.com
A forum with technical
information:
MotoScrubs.com
this new Mark 3 was now less of a café
racer and more mainstream in style.
Ducati was already looking towards
its new wide-case singles, some with
desmodromic valve gear, and time was up
for the fragile and delicate narrow-case
singles. Now, more than 50 years later,
the 250 Mach 1 has garnered cult status.
Rare and beautiful, this was Ducati’s most
outstanding production bike of the 1960s
and it epitomises the best of the overhead
camshaftDucatisportingsingle.
Collectables
The Mach 1 could more
than hold its own in the
handling department
ABOVE The touring version
featured a dual seat,
semi-ape-hanger
handlebars and a black
frame. Pillion ’pegs
must’ve run off the
shock-absorber bolts.
MACH 1
DUC
ATI (^250)