In 2014, Ducati did the unthinkable. The current dominator of the sportsbike arms race鈥攊ts performance bikes are now the most powerful, lightest weight, and highest spec in nearly every segment鈥攍aunched . The Scrambler didn鈥檛 set out to be the fastest bike on the market, it simply set out to be the most fun,聽for any rider. With an 800cc v-twin, that first model set out to strike the proverbial Goldilocks balance, but was still a little too much for brand-new riders. Today, the聽new Sixty2 sets out to address that disparity. With half the engine capacity聽and half the power, can it be just right for beginners? We dive in.听
What Is It?
Even though it has half the engine capacity, the Sixty2 is much more than half a Scrambler. In fact, it鈥檚 pretty much the same bike, just fitted with a smaller, 399cc version of the same, Monster-derived, air-cooled v-twin. Dimensions are identical鈥攂oth have a very low, 31.1-inch seat height鈥攁nd even the outright weights are close enough as to be indistinguishable on the road. The 800cc bike weighs in at 410 pounds聽(wet). The Sixty2:聽403 pounds.听
There are some minor mechanical differences,聽like brake calipers (the bigger bike uses a single 330-millimeter聽disc with a four-piston caliper, while聽the Sixty2聽has聽a 320-millimeter聽disc with two piston caliper),聽and the Sixty2 appears to wear forks and an exhaust that aren鈥檛 quite as nice.听But that鈥檚 about it. The聽rest are聽the same top-notch聽Ducati ingredients, namely聽a steel trellis frame and minimal bodywork, now fitted with a friendly, upright riding position and handsome, retro styling.听
The name? Ducati launched its original Scrambler model (a 250cc single) way back in 1962. Like this new bike, the namesake was a fun all-rounder, with a little more dirt capability than most street bikes, but nowhere near the same off-road performance as a real dirt bike.听
Who鈥檚 It For?
Already friendly and accessible at 800cc, this smaller Scrambler聽is going to be an odd fit for the American market. In other countries, taxes, high insurance rates, and even age restrictions pegged to motor capacity and performance combine to keep many inexperienced, young, or budget-minded riders on small-capacity bikes. And the Sixty2鈥檚 399cc capacity neatly undercuts the 400cc limit that鈥檚 present in places like Japan and Australia.听
Here, the model is being imported to appeal to totally new riders who nonetheless want to buy a new Ducati. It鈥檚 priced $1,000 below its big brother, and its engine is substantially less intimidating to the inexperienced. Where, on the bigger bike, the initial surge of torque delivered as you pull away from a dead stop can catch you by surprise, the Sixty2鈥檚 delivery is decidedly friendlier and聽easier to manage.听
Design
While the 800cc Scrambler will eventually be available in four different styles, the Sixty2 sticks with the basic concept. Free of adornment, it鈥檚 a little retro, a little cafe, a little聽flat track, and a little聽classic Ducati. All that鈥檚 a good thing. Where rivals from brands like Triumph, Harley-Davidson, and Moto Guzzi attempt to ape past models from the 鈥60s and 鈥70s, the Scrambler feels like a unique, modern motorcycle that nevertheless fulfills the current fashion for old-looking bikes.听
It should also be noted that, so far as entry-level bikes go, this Ducati looks and feels vastly more substantial than 250 to 500cc learner聽bikes from the likes of Honda, Suzuki, Yamaha,聽or Kawasaki. It鈥檚 small enough to be manageable, but large enough that it doesn鈥檛 feel like a toy.听
Using It
The 800cc Scrambler is confidence inspiring, emotive, comfortable, and easy. All traits the Sixty2 shares, just with a easier-going engine that retains the uneven character of a v-twin, but doesn鈥檛 hit quite as hard low in its rev range.听
The Sixty2 is most at home in the city, where its light weight, wide bars, and upright riding position make聽easy work of dense traffic and potholed streets. Its 41 horsepower聽and 26 pound-feet of torque are still capable of winning stoplight drag races against virtually any car, and it keeps ahead of traffic on the highway just fine,聽too.听
Climb into the mountains to find good roads, and you鈥檒l need to use the gearbox to get some extra oomph. But there鈥檚 still plenty on tap to make back roads fun鈥攁nd to put your license at risk.听With such upright riding positions and wide handlebars, neither model is totally at home on the highway, but a few hours cruising in the left lane are totally doable on both. You鈥檒l just need to shift down to pass on the Sixty2.听
Likes
- Not an聽exact recreation, not a cafe racer, the Scrambler goes its own styling direction and is stronger for it.听
- Alloy wheels and tubeless tires keep unsprung weight low. Compared to spoke-and-tube competitors, everything from acceleration to braking, ride quality to handling, remains optimized.听
- The riding position is utterly perfect in the city. You will not find a better bike for blasting through traffic and cruising down boulevards.听
- Ducati has managed to retain the v-twin鈥檚 raucous character, while reducing performance to beginner聽levels. This very much remains a bike you'll fall in love with.听
Dislikes
- Smaller holes don鈥檛 mean lower weight. It鈥檚 not as if the 800cc Scrambler isn鈥檛 already聽light, it鈥檚 that the Sixty2 isn鈥檛 substantially lighter. And it鈥檚 weight, not power delivery, that is most important for making a motorcycle accessible.听
- Some of the cost savings are evident. We miss the more powerful brake calipers聽and nicer finish of the larger model.听
- The $7,995 price remains聽high for a bike targeted at new riders.听
Should You Buy It?聽
Ducati has聽delivered a motorcycle that is even more new-rider friendly than the 800cc Scrambler. And one that feels and rides much nicer than entry level bikes from the Japanese competition, at an admittedly聽higher price. But聽here's the thing: we still don't think you should buy it.听
Motorcycling isn鈥檛 something you can just purchase (or finance). It鈥檚 a lifelong challenge in which you trade freedom for danger, excitement for responsibility, and give up ever having to sit in traffic again for getting wet, cold, and, at some point, injured. If that sounds like a good idea to you, then you also need to accept that becoming a motorcyclist involves accepting a lifelong pursuit of skill. And, in that, new riders would be much, much better served by starting on a cheap, small, light bike acquired from Craigslist for a couple thousand dollars. Six months to a year spent on that, dropping it, breaking it, fixing it, learning to maintain and ride it will fast-forward you into the ranks of competent, safe, knowledgeable riding.
And, once you鈥檙e there, you鈥檒l be much better served by the faster, more fun, 800cc Ducati Scrambler. Heck, you might even know how to keep it looking nice, shiny, and scratch-free by then.听