One owner ignored the rules and painted his rare Ducati green. Arguably, they created an even better story.
There are motorcycle collectors who treat rare bikes like sacred artifacts. They obsess over factory paint codes, period-correct fasteners, and whether a sticker sits exactly three millimeters to the left or right of where it left the factory fifty years ago.
Then there’s the guy who looked at and said, “You know what? I think I’d rather have it in British Racing Green.”
That’s exactly what happened to this , one of just 401 round-case examples ever produced. According to the Bonhams auction page, a bike like this carries an estimated value of £70,000 to £90,000, or roughly $93,000 to $120,000. In the world of collectible motorcycles, that’s serious money. It’s also the sort of number that usually convinces owners to stop riding and start polishing.
Not this guy.
This particular Ducati’s story starts the same way as every 750SS legend. Ducati’s stunning victory at Imola in 1972 turned the company’s V-twin into an overnight hero .beat factory-backed giants from and , and the road-going 750SS that followed became one of the most desirable sportbikes of its era. It was basically a race bike with a license plate and enough charisma to make grown adults spend irresponsible amounts of money.
Most surviving examples now spend their lives under soft lighting in climate-controlled collections. This one spent decades being used exactly as a motorcycle should.
The Danish owner bought it during the 1980s and proceeded to put thousands of miles on it over the next two decades. The Ducati carried him around Denmark, through Scandinavia, and even back to northern Italy. It wasn’t a trophy. It was transportation. Then came the part that would make some collectors reach for the smelling salts.
In 2005, the bike underwent a restoration. During the process, the owner decided not to return it to the factory silver-and-green paint scheme. Instead, he painted it British Racing Green.
Normally, that’s the sort of thing that sparks furious arguments on internet forums. Rare motorcycles are supposed to be preserved, not personalized. Yet the reason behind the color change makes it difficult to get too angry. The green paint was chosen as a tribute to his father, an English RAF pilot who was shot down over Dortmund during World War II and later worked in Jaguar’s design department. Suddenly the paint isn’t a modification. It’s a memorial.
What’s fascinating is that the bike remains highly desirable despite the repaint. Ducati historian Ian Falloon reportedly inspected it decades ago and recognized it as a genuine and sound green-frame 750SS. The important stuff is still there. The frame, engine, history, and authenticity remain intact. So maybe that’s what makes this motorcycle so interesting.
Photos by: Bonhams|Cars
The collector market often treats originality as the highest virtue. This Ducati argues that maybe . Not just Ducati’s story, or Paul Smart’s story, but the stories of the people who actually owned them.
Soon, another enthusiast will get the chance to become part of that story. The bike is headed to auction with an estimated value of £70,000 to £90,000, which translates to roughly $93,000 to $120,000. That’s a lot of money for a motorcycle, but in the rarefied world of round-case Ducatis, it’s the price of admission. For the right buyer, this isn’t just a chance to own one of the most sought-after Ducatis ever built. It’s an opportunity to own one with a history that’s every bit as compelling as the machine itself.