This is a known thing, but i thought i would share my experience. I like 1x drivechains. When i used to race cross i was a great fan of them as they tended not to clog up so much in the mud. I now run them on my road and mountain bikes as well.
Anyways, i am still a huge fan of campag 10 speed ergos, but i was a bit frustrated by the low gear limitations of campag cassettes and rear mechs. I did the shimergo thing for a while and tried j-tek adapters and while they did work neither was quite right. Then i tried campag ergos with a sram 10 speed mountain bike mech and 11-36 cassette. It works perfectly - better than with campag mech and cassette. The mech has a clutch and also i reckon capacity for an even bigger sprocket on the back. It's fabulous!
Rich
I used 9 speed ergos with 9 cogs of a 10speed shimano cassette and shifted by a clutched Sram X9 10speed medium cage, for a while, and it worked very well. I then went over to Sram 10speed levers purely out of preference of how the paddles work.
Using an extender(a short one), for the derailleur pivot, and larger pulley wheels from an Altus, to increase wrap, I managed to get the same mech to handle 13-42 and 33/52 up front. The front end was handled by an X9, too.
It worked very well and was just a bit of fun to see how far one can go outside of the manufacturers specs. It did require quite a long chain to get all the gears to work, on a late 90's mtb, and was a good test of the clutch idea. Clutches do work very well but I feel they might add resistance, to the drivetrain. Maybe it is why they are not on road mechs?
The clutched X9 is a very capable mech and pretty tough. I recently replaced it with a clutched X0, which is much the same but fully serviceable, and some weeks ago that survived getting stuck in the spokes and bent back on itself, after a small branch went into the mech. The B screw was bent in half and the replaceable hanger was seriously bent, but the mech survived and still shifts as it should.