I've attached a picture from a book you should buy if you want to understand motorcycle suspension systems, 'Race Tech's Motorcycle Suspension Bible' by Paul Thede and Lee Parks- if I plug their book they may not sue me for stealing the image.
fork leg.jpg
From looking through the parts books I'm not sure how the Ducati forks are built- can't see any bushings, but the picture shows the bushings I'm talking about, one on the slider and one on the tube. The bushings keep the slider and the tube in axial alignment- if the tube can flop around inside the slider there will be lots of looseness in the forks. You can also see that when the leg is fully extended the bushings are closest together and least stable, as the slider moves up the leg the entire assembly will become better supported.
I once added bushings to a set of forks- machined the slider to accept a UHMW bushing beneath the seal, and turned a shallow groove into the tube to accept another UHMW bushing- had the slider honed before fitting- lots of work, but the front end felt much better.
Buy the book, it will answer lots of your questions.
If you disassemble the forks, take some pictures so those of us who haven't had a set apart can see what's in there.
Rick
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.