Ducati 848

title: "Ducati 848" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["ducati-motorcycles", "motorcycles-introduced-in-2008", "sport-bikes", "motorcycles-powered-by-v-engines"] topic_path: "sports" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducati_848" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::data[format=table title="Infobox Motorcycle"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ducati 848 |
| image | Dpducati848 091510.jpg |
| manufacturer | Ducati |
| production | 2008–2013 |
| predecessor | Ducati 749 |
| successor | Ducati 899 |
| class | Sport bike |
| engine | 849 cc, 4-valves/cyl. desmodromic liquid cooled 90° L-twin |
| bore_stroke | 94 × |
| compression | 12:1 |
| top_speed | 180 mph |
| power | 92 kW @ 10,000 rpm (848 first gen.) |
| 103 kW @ 10,500 rpm (848EVO and 848 EVO Corse SE) | |
| torque | 90 Nm @ 8,240 rpm (claimed) (848 first gen.) |
| 98 Nm @ 9,750 rpm (claimed) (848EVO and 848 EVO Corse SE) | |
| transmission | 6-speed, wet clutch |
| suspension | Front: Showa fully adjustable upside-down forks, 127 mm travel |
| Rear: Showa fully adjustable monoshock, 120 mm travel | |
| brakes | Front: 2×320 mm semi-floating discs, radial Brembo 4-piston calipers |
| Rear: 245 mm disc, 2-piston caliper | |
| tires | Front: 120/70 ZR17 |
| Rear: 180/55 ZR17 | |
| rake_trail | 24.5°, 97 mm |
| wheelbase | 1430 mm |
| length | 2100 mm |
| height | 1100 mm |
| seat_height | 830 mm |
| dry_weight | 168 kg (claimed) |
| fuel_capacity | 15.5 L incl 4.1 L reserve |
| fuel_consumption | 44 mpgus |
| related | Ducati 1198 |
| :: |
| name = Ducati 848 | image = Dpducati848 091510.jpg | manufacturer = Ducati | parent_company = | production = 2008–2013 | model_year = | predecessor = Ducati 749 | successor = Ducati 899 | class = Sport bike | engine = 849 cc, 4-valves/cyl. desmodromic liquid cooled 90° L-twin | bore_stroke = 94 × | compression = 12:1 |top_speed = 180 mph | power = 92 kW @ 10,000 rpm (848 first gen.) 103 kW @ 10,500 rpm (848EVO and 848 EVO Corse SE) | torque = 90 Nm @ 8,240 rpm (claimed) (848 first gen.) 98 Nm @ 9,750 rpm (claimed) (848EVO and 848 EVO Corse SE) | transmission = 6-speed, wet clutch | suspension = Front: Showa fully adjustable upside-down forks, 127 mm travel Rear: Showa fully adjustable monoshock, 120 mm travel | brakes = Front: 2×320 mm semi-floating discs, radial Brembo 4-piston calipers Rear: 245 mm disc, 2-piston caliper | tires = Front: 120/70 ZR17 Rear: 180/55 ZR17 | rake_trail = 24.5°, 97 mm | wheelbase = 1430 mm | length = 2100 mm | width = | height = 1100 mm | seat_height = 830 mm | dry_weight = 168 kg (claimed) | wet_weight = | fuel_capacity = 15.5 L incl 4.1 L reserve | oil_capacity = | fuel_consumption = 44 mpgus | turning_radius = | climbing_ability = | related = Ducati 1198
The Ducati 848 is a sport bike with a 849 cc 90° L-twin engine made by Ducati. It was announced on November 6, 2007, for the 2008 model year, replacing the 749. The 848 and the 1098 are the same design by Giandrea Fabbro, both use the same frame and bodywork. The first generation 848 makes a claimed 92 kW 10,000 rpm and 90 Nm torque at 8,240 rpm. With a manufacturer claimed dry weight of 168 kg, the 848 is 5 kg lighter than its larger displacement sibling, the 1198. The first generation 848 covered model years 2008, 2009 and 2010. In July 2009 the 848 Hayden Limited Edition was introduced as a 2010 model as a marketing tie-in with world champion Nicky Hayden racing for Ducati starting from the 2009 Moto GP season.
In August 2010, Ducati announced the 848 Evo, as the evolution of the model. The bike had small revisions such as mono-block Brembo brake calipers, a steering damper, and some engine improvements to increase power and torque to 103 kW at 10,500 rpm and 98 Nm torque at 9,750 rpm.
For the last model years 2012 and 2013, the 848 EVO Corse Special Edition was sold as a premium version next to the standard 848 EVO. The 2012 model 848 EVO Corse Special Edition had the Corse color scheme, upgraded 330 mm front brakes, adjustable Öhlins suspension, Ducati Quick Shift (DQS), Ducati Data Analyser (DDA), and adjustable Ducati Traction Control (DTC). The 2013 model year of the Corse Special Edition has an aluminium fuel tank reducing dry weight to 167 kg and adding 2.5 L capacity. All 848 EVO Corse Special Editions had a claimed 103 kW at 10,500 rpm and 98 Nm torque at 9,7500 rpm. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1a/Ducati_848_EVO_Corse_SE.jpg" caption="848 EVO Corse Special Edition 2012 model year"] ::
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/Ducati_848_Hayden_Limited_Edition.jpg" caption="Ducati 848 Hayden Limited Edition"] ::
In 2013, Ducati announced the 848 would be replaced by the 899 Panigale.
Changes from predecessor
Trellis frame
Developed in cooperation with Ducati Corse, the 848 trellis frame uses a simplified tube layout from the Ducati 749 with main section tubes that are enlarged in diameter from 28 mm to 34 mm, while being reduced in thickness from 2 mm to 1.5 mm. Ducati says this results in a 14% increase in rigidity and a weight savings of 1.5 kg, helping the 848 weigh a claimed 44 lb less than the 749.
Engine revision
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1e/ZF-7600-49718-1-002.jpg" caption="Race-Prepped Ducati 848 at [[Miller Motorsports Park"] ::
While most of the chassis components are identical to the 1098/1198, the motor was an all new design in 2008. Producing roughly 116 hp at the rear wheel. The "Testastretta Evoluzione" uses a 94 x 61.2 mm bore and stroke for 849 cc of displacement despite the bike's moniker of 848. The motor casings were constructed using a new vacuum die-casting method called Vacural that helps the engine weigh 7 lb less than the Ducati 749. The intake valves were increased 2.5 mm from the Ducati 749 numbers to 39.5 mm. The exhaust valves were enlarged 1.5 mm to 32 mm. The valve angles are identical to the Ducati 1098. The bike uses a pair of elliptical 56 mm throttle bodies fashioned after MotoGP designs.
The 2011 Ducati 848 Evo had several changes to the engine, including new Marelli throttle bodies, revised cylinder heads with straighter intake ports and reshaped combustion chambers. Ducati claimed these changes would result in an 15 hp increase, bringing output to 103 kW Cycle World magazine's first dynamometer test of the engine showed a 1.6 hp increase over the previous motor. Noteworthy EVO engine changes are the increased compression ratio from 12:1 on the first generation 848 to 13.2:1 on the EVO's with the rpm red-line moving from 10,800 rpm to 11,300 rpm on the EVO. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c4/Ducati_848_EVO_in_Gwalior.JPG" caption="Ducati 848 EVO"] ::
Wet clutch
Although the 1198 and 848 share many similar components, as per the 916/748 and 999/749 models, the 848 uses a wet clutch rather than the traditional dry clutch of previous superbikes from Ducati. The manufacturer claims it reduces weight, improves both service life and "feel" of the clutch and reduces noise. Ducati has in the past held to only dry clutches in accordance with marketing their bikes as obeying the design imperatives of racing above all, unlike, as Ducati would have it, ordinary street bikes. While a dry clutch "rattles like a bucket of rocks," Ducati and its adherents felt the clutch's "typical noise is music to bikers' ears." ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/16/Ducati_848.jpg" caption="Ducati 848"] ::
Comparison with larger Ducati superbikes
The 848 shares more physical and technical design elements with the stronger 1098/1198 than its predecessor, the 749, did with the 999. In many cases the 1098/1198 and the 848 are identical right down to the part numbers.
The two bikes use the same bodywork, including the fuel tank. With the exception of the steering damper mount, the frame between the bikes is the same, which results in identical wheelbase and rake and trail numbers. The second generation 848 Evo had the same monoblock brake calipers and the same frame with the steering damper mount as the 1098/1198. The 848 EVO Corse Special Edition uses the 330 mm front brake disk from the 1098/1198. The rear suspension, including the suspension linkage is the same, using identical Showa shocks. Many components of the exhaust system are shared, including the exhaust canisters that house the muffler and catalytic converter.
Despite the difference in engine displacement, the two bikes share valve angles and magnesium valve covers. The oil cooler and radiator are also very similar. The transmissions are different with the ratios on the 848 being closer together.
Notes
References
- {{Citation |last=Bond |first=Steve |date=9 December 2006 |title=Gorgeous Monster totally impractical |url=https://www.thestar.com/printArticle/131390 |publisher=Toronto Star |work=thestar.com }}
- {{Cite web |last= Cernicky |first= Mark |date=December 2007 |title=WebRide: 2008 Ducati 848 |periodical=Cycle World |url=http://www.cycleworld.com/article.asp?section_id=3&article_id=568 |publisher=Hachette Filipacchi Media, U.S. }}
- {{Citation |author=Ducati TechCafe FAQ |title=Ducati.com |chapter= 7: Why do Ducatis have dry clutches? |publisher=Ducati Motor Holding |url=http://www.ducati.com/bikes/techcafe.jhtml?part=faq&value=faq#question7 |at=Question 7|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081223233038/http://www.ducati.com/bikes/techcafe.jhtml?part=faq&value=faq |archive-date=December 23, 2008 }}
- {{Cite web |last= Hutchison |first=Ken |date=17 December 2007 |title=2008 Ducati 848 First Ride |periodical=MotocycleUSA.com |url=http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/65/240/Motorcycle-Article/2008-Ducati-848-First-Ride.aspx}}
- Video: First ride of the new Ducati 848, Motorcycle News, 3 December 2007
- Video: Ducati 1098 vs 848, Motorcycle News, 19 December 2007
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References
- (August 2010). "2011 Ducati 848 EVO - World Exclusive First Test- 2011 Ducati Reviews".
- (8 January 2013). "2013 Ducati Superbike 848 EVO Corse SE - TopSpeed".
- (10 October 2012). "2013 Ducati 848EVO Corse SE Looks Fearsome - AutoEvolution".
- (September 9, 2013). "Ducati reveals 2014 899 Panigale".
- "Ducati Announces the 848 Superbike!". WebBikeWorld.
- (December 28, 2007). "2008 Ducati road test, a class of its own". motorcycle.com.
- (5 November 2007). "2008 Ducati 848 and 1098R First Look - Motorcycle USA".
- (1995). "Directive 95/1/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 2 February 1995 on the maximum design speed, maximum torque and maximum net engine power of two or three-wheel motor vehicles measured at the crank.". Council of the European Union, European Parliament.
- "Ducati 848 MY08 Specifications". Ducati.com.
- {{harvnb. Ducati TechCafe FAQ
- {{harvnb. Bond. 2006
- Norris. 2008a
- (2009). "Ducati 848 & 848 Hayden LE owner manual". Ducati Motor Holding SpA.
- (July 2009). "Cycle World - 2x2: 2009 Ducati 848 vs. 2009 Triumph Daytona 675". Hachette Filipacchi Media, U.S..
- (2011). "Ducati 848 EVO Corse SE Owner Manual". Ducati Motor Holding SpA.
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