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Ducati 899 Panigale “Impure” Cafe Racer by Matt Errey
Australian custom builder Matt Errey picked up a brand new 2015 Ducati 899 Panigale and returned to his home-based garage and set to work on his unorthodox custom build. Words by Matt Errey: I’d been talking about modifying a Ducati as my next project for a few years
with my sights firmly set on the streetfighter 848, trellis frame, naked
bike... easy. Then the Panigale came out. It was perfect. Light and fast
with all the electronics you could want and a monocoque frame just to make
things difficult. Salvageable wrecks were nearly impossible to find and
second-hand bikes were only marginally cheaper than new so in October 2015 I
picked up a brand new Panigale 899 as a birthday present to myself. It spent
about a month on the road being run-in, including a day at the track, then
it was off to the garage to get pulled apart.
It started with the rear of the frame being re-worked using 25mm aluminium bar, replicating the stock frame and then opening up into a Jetsons-inspired open tail. All the wiring would run internally and would include Motogadget indicators and a LED brake light. The stock exhaust headers were sent off to get ceramic coated inside and out to keep the heat down as all the shielding had been removed. The headers were assembled back onto the bike and the whole thing sent to master welder Ben Doswell at DOZFAB to make up a set of stainless forward exiting mufflers. While the mufflers were being made I modified a JW speaker surround to go around an LED headlight bucket that was machined from 230mm solid aluminium. It’s a two-piece surround with no visible fasteners to form the front of the bike that took well over 20hrs to make. A new radiator support bracket was laser cut from stainless with CNC machined posts that were designed in the shed and then made by Hammond Engineering in Bairnsdale before being welded in place.
After that I sank a lot of time into designing new bracketry for the OEM components that had to go back onto the bike. They were all created in CAD and welded up by DOZFAB out of stainless steel before being painted and fit back onto the bike. The electrics were the most time-consuming part of the build. The Ducati has sensors everywhere and a black box recorder and it all runs through a CANBUS system that you can’t mess with so a lot of it had to stay where it was. Then came the leather work. I sourced some 2mm thick natural tan leather, a stitch roller and some sewing awls and proceeded to teach myself over many, many hours to hand sew baseball stitch for the new seat upholstery, dash cover and saddle bags. The saddle bags themselves contain the stock electrics for the bike and are good for over 260kph. Everything on the bike is still where the service technicians would expect it to be. Despite all the fabrication work still going on, the engine didn’t go untouched. The emissions gear was removed, the bike received a new tune and a lightened generator kit installed for quicker throttle response. The stock seat was levelled out and jacked up for a more comfortable riding position before being given an extra layer of foam and re-covered in leather. The remaining stock plastic was then covered in anime stickers just to raise the eclectic level up a bit more. The side panels were hand beaten out of 1.6mm aluminium to cover up the ABS system and battery. I only had a week until a major ride was taking place and I wanted to take the bike along so I didn’t have time to make a beater bag and do them properly, so, they were made with a ball-peen hammer and an old couch cushion. The first few rides were pretty interesting. I had to wind the suspension settings right back to suit the 15kgs I’d dropped off the bike, but since then it’s done 8000kms, including a 3000km trip around Tasmania. It's performed flawlessly through all weather conditions, and the leather has aged nicely with the addition of a few thousand dead bugs. The only issue is that it takes forever to fill with fuel because I'm constantly interuppted by people wanting to know what it is. Oh…. And the purists, they don’t like me so much. Source Psychoschematic Photography by Ben Mulligan
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |