This 1980 Ducati Darmah was found
discarded in a barn. Being a literal barn fine, it had lay
unloved for more than 20 years until a chance conversation
landed it in the hands of the guy’s at Rasio.
Decided early on that the original forks
and twin rear shock setup would be discarded, the frame required
some serious modification. All completed in house, an entirely
new headstock was fabricated and grafted on, in anticipation of
a Ducati 1098 front end; meaning Ohlins and Brembo goodness. The
frame also received new top rails, along with additional
gusseting and bracing around the front to ensure the enhanced
braking prowess wouldn’t tie the original trellis up in knots.
At the rear, the swingarm was converted to
accept a monoshock, the suspension picking up directly under the
main frame top tubes, while a nifty Ohlins Shock keeps the rear
wheel planted. This combination of traditional trellis and
quality modern suspension integrates beautifully, making the
bike deceptively simple to look at.
Whilst it’s easy to slap on a set of
stainless spoked wheels and call it Cafe’d, Rasio went a
different route.
Astralite’s are now back in production after a 20 year
break, the perfect period wheel for the bike. Made in the UK to
modern metallurgy and manufacturing standards, the gold
anodizing ties the whole bike together. Planting it firmly in
the late ’70s, early ’80’s the split rim design ties in
beautifully with the boxier styling of the L-twin. A firm nod to
the performance options available to the bike when it was
originally made.
When hoiked out of the frame, the motor
was in a sorry old state externally, but sweet inside having
only covered 10k miles. And while the squared off covers don’t
quite have quite the grace of the earlier Ducati power units, a
metric ton of polishing paste has transformed it into a star
attraction.
Rasio, being guys who like to do things
properly, stripped the motor anyway. Cases were blasted and
powder coated and many a long night polishing got the supporting
parts up to visual standard. Rebuilt with new bearings and
shells throughout, she breathes through a set of new Dellorto
PHM 40 carbs. The whole unit hangs in the trellis looking
unfeasibly simple, yet unmistakably Ducati.
The stunning lines of the bike can really
be attributed to that tank. It’s an NCR replica from an old
900SS race bike but it needed susbstantial work to bring it back
to life. After a thorough hammering, welding, filing and
English-Wheeling, a classic timeless black and gold paintjob
looks like it came straight from a factory racer. Butting up
against the solo seat, the combination is the definition of
‘purposeful’. With the Rasio Dragon logo capping the black vinyl
hump, it’s down to the recessed tail light to remind you this is
roadbike; but whip that number plate off and you feel you could
go hunting for Hailwood.
Maintaining the D’Karmah’s identity, the
original headlight was retained, being modified to contribute to
the minimalist remit. Keeping the cockpit clear, the speedo was
inset into the bucket, and the necessary relays and fuses were
tucked inside along with it. A new wiring loom incorporates
a light weight Ballistic Li-Po battery, further reducing weight
and allowing it to be kept out of sight. This is one of theose
bikes that looks almost purely mechanical in it’s functionality.
Despite being assembled from 3 decades
worth of parts, the bike is extremely cohesive, to the point
that if Ducati released it as a sibling to the new Scrambler,
you’d never question it’s origins. As Mark says:
“Throughout the build, the objective
was to blend the modern running gear with the classic Bevel
drive motor but with a period cafe racer look. Not easy given
the original donor but we think we’ve pulled it off and created
a classicly styled Café racer with modern day overtones.”