Ducati’s Scrambler has been around for a while now and there have been a fair few custom builders who’ve had a go at showing us what Bologna’s designers could have penned. Holographic Hammer’s carbon wheeled, quad front disc café racer proved that they’re just as good at building bikes as they are at colouring-in. Marcus Walz created a similarly track focussed café with added race.
Meanwhile Deus plumped for wowing through colour and Vibration Art & Design shaped some old oil drums into a striking silhouette. Fred Kruger though seemed to share our opinion that the stock swingarm is aesthetically challenged and knocked-up something more in keeping with the trellis frame. After all, one of Ducati’s lorded and defining features is that fabulous structure suggesting a raw and handmade interface between rider and machine. The stock seat and subframe also leave a little to be desired in factory trim. Obviously there’s a whole bunch of stuff under there including a hefty lead acid battery, ECU and an ABS pump which don’t exactly disappear without a fight so we appreciate builds that say bollox to the easy option and hide more of the guff showing off more of the sexy mechanicals.
From that point onwards, the build was geared towards stripping and removing all extraneous details and components, including numerous plastic panels; “we ended up with two large tubs of just plastic parts” says Eccles. The result is a bike that weighs around 147kgs, some forty lighter than standard. That’s less than a 125cc Vespa so performance should be enthusiastic to say the very least.
Noise regs and intervention from the efficiency police has meant the trademark dry-clutch clatter is being phased out of most new Ducatis but that doesn’t mean the wet one should be hidden. Hugo had the friction plates lightly machined for visual cleanliness and a Ducabike clear polycarbonate cover allows all to see the mechanical wonder inside. To keep the weight, both visual and physical, to a minimum and low down QD fabricated an underslung silencer box which supplies a proper soundtrack to make up for the quiet drivetrain.
An aluminium billet was machined to house the ultra-bright LED headlight whilst rearward Custom Dynamics LED strips deal with stopping and turning lights, completing the futuristically functional and minimal look.
Phew, nearly there. Well, not quite, there’s a whole load of other work that’s gone into this build highlighting why Hugo has been so busy for the last few months. No, I haven’t forgotten to mention the paint. Not exactly subtle is it? When Rossi joined Ducati MotoGP the team needed to make the GP11 ‘really pop’ and seeing as TV cameras ruin the vibrancy of colours in a bid to bring consistency to viewers the paint department mixed-up for a more fluro version of Rosso Corsa which looked the business against Vale’s neon yellow trademark colour scheme. The factory carried this hue over to the 1199 Superleggera ‘road’ bike and what better colour to choose for a build sharing a similar ethos.
Eccles is the first to admit that this build is somewhat out of character for Untitled Motorcycles. “It’s a competition build so we set out to do something intentionally provocative. Although this bike is road legal, the next road-going versions will be designed and detailed differently”. Watch this space…
Obviously we’re biased, not just because Hugo and Adam are mates but because we love proper engineering, and Ducatis.
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Photos by RC Rivera via The Bike Shed