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2013 Ducati Diavel Amg Sport Touring on 2040-motos

US $24,500.00
YearYear:2013 MileageMileage:3
Location:

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, US

Myrtle Beach, SC, US
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2013 Ducati Diavel AMG Sport Touring , US $24,500.00, image 1

Ducati Other photos

2013 Ducati Diavel AMG Sport Touring , US $24,500.00, image 2

Ducati Other tech info

TypeType:Sport Touring PhonePhone:8435161314

Ducati Other description

2013 Ducati Diavel AMG, In excellent condition with many upgrades. No accident, no drop, no scratches. I am interested in trading in for a Panigale R. $24,500.00 8435161314

Moto blog

Report: Ducati Sold to Audi for US$1.13 Billion

Tue, 17 Apr 2012

Reuters is reporting Audi has reached a deal with Investindustrial to acquire Ducati for a price of 860 million euros (US$1.13 billion). Citing two unnamed sources familiar with the deal, Reuters reports the purchase price includes Ducati‘s debts, estimated by one of those sources at below 200 million euros (US$262.6 million). As previously reported, the deal will be officially announced April 18, ahead of the annual shareholders meeting for Audi’s parent company, the Volkswagen Group.

Filippo Preziosi Resigns from Ducati

Thu, 28 Feb 2013

Former General Manager of Ducati Corse Filippo Preziosi has resigned from the company, ending his 19-year career with the Italian manufacturer. Preziosi led Ducati‘s racing program for the last decade including its lone MotoGP championship in 2007, but the 44-year-old engineer also carries a lot of the blame for Ducati’s recent struggles including the doomed Valentino Rossi era. Preziosi held the position of GM of Ducati Corse until last November when he was replaced with former BMW Superbike manager Bernhard Gobmeier.

Mamola crashes the two-seater Ducati Desmosedici

Wed, 19 Jun 2013

For years now, at every MotoGP, Ducati have taken VIP guests out on track with Randy Mamola giving them a glimpse of what a MotoGP bike can do. But as we all know: the difference between being on the edge and being over it are smaller than we'd like, especially if you've got a pillion adding another dimension of complexity to the physics you're already battling with. In short: sometimes even ex-GP winners get it wrong.