2019 Turbo Levo Owners Thread

comtn

Member
Founding Member
Feb 27, 2018
139
78
Colorado Springs
I can confirm that my 2019 is def louder than my 2018. The prior version was near silent. I think Robs video sounded super loud though...I wouldnt say mine is that loud, but its def got more noise which is not faborable. The ride itself...its pretty different handling. Then again, I also modded this more that the last one I had for maybe a week.

I test rode a '19 here in Colorado at a dealer and it was much much louder than my '18. Not terrible but would rather not have the added noise. The 18 is near silent unless really pushed hard up a hill.
 

Doomanic

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Jan 21, 2018
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To be fair, that's usually audible over the sound of an F35 in full reheat. :LOL:
 

sirshan

Active member
Oct 2, 2018
99
69
Oakland, CA USA
Also depends how much effort ur putting. Doesnt bug me. If someone blind was hiking a trail, then the sound will have done its job. Like my electric car...has a noise
 

R120

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Apr 13, 2018
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Surrey
Nooooo no no no no... I have that fricken tilty seatpost, and whilst it's gash in many ways, that is not the problem. Bikes look better with the seat down, and should only ever be photographed with it down! if you think otherwise, you have no style and probably go out wearing a utility belt and sandals with socks...

You're embarrassing your bike, it's like abuse, because it has no choice, millions of bikes all over the world screaming out in silent terror "No please not again! Please don't take pics of me with my saddle up! Please no! PLEASE!!" Snap! "Oh for fucks sake"...

Zero style!! All you saddle up freaks! :)
↓↓↓↓↓↓
Please post a picture of your bike, after such an erudite discourse on the aesthetic essentials of bicycle photography i (and i am sure many other members) would love to see how it is done properly.

I have no doubt that it would be of such spectacular quality that Rob would no doubt be left with but no option as to give it a shout out in the live show
 

mymodel6

New Member
Oct 2, 2018
74
52
Hertfordshire
Please post a picture of your bike, after such an erudite discourse on the aesthetic essentials of bicycle photography i (and i am sure many other members) would love to see how it is done properly.

I have no doubt that it would be of such spectacular quality that Rob would no doubt be left with but no option as to give it a shout out in the live show

I've got nothing to prove to you XC lycra weirdos with seats higher than your bloody handlebars.

What's wrong with you people? It's like a Ferrari with frickin snow chains on the tyres, you aint having no fun with the seat all the way up there, you're a cross country, Trailforks using, 50 year old with a pony tail lycra bulge!

;)
 

Rob Rides EMTB

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Jan 14, 2018
6,146
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hmm.

APC_0117-Edit.jpg
 

m0ngy

New Member
Oct 10, 2018
8
11
Melbourne
New motor in my 2019. Totally sorted all the noise.

OK, so was there a QC issue with the first motor? That new video you've posted is impressive, nice and quiet. Is it a lottery, as to whether you get a loud as f%&k motor or not? What did Specialized say about the swap? Are they doing a recall?
 

Gary

Old Tartan Bollocks
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Subscriber
Mar 29, 2018
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the internet
Nooooo no no no no... I have that fricken tilty seatpost, and whilst it's gash in many ways, that is not the problem. Bikes look better with the seat down, and should only ever be photographed with it down! if you think otherwise, you have no style and probably go out wearing a utility belt and sandals with socks...

You're embarrassing your bike, it's like abuse, because it has no choice, millions of bikes all over the world screaming out in silent terror "No please not again! Please don't take pics of me with my saddle up! Please no! PLEASE!!" Snap! "Oh for fucks sake"...

Zero style!! All you saddle up freaks! :)
↓↓↓↓↓↓
Haha...

Just for you

Dartmoor4X.jpg

250mm dropper FTW ;)

Apologies to the rest of you for turning up and derailling your thread, but he is kinda right!
Saddle up compliments the fast XC race look, slammed does the same for fun/radness.
The thing is XC is actually fun and rad if you're fit and highly skilled enough, even with the saddle up. in a similar way to how stylish a super smooth BMX racer can look

xSCOTT-Odlo_Val-di-Sole_Action-Image_2015_BIKE_SCOTT-Sports_106-601x400.jpg

Basically Nino above is doing a lookback or as much of a lookback as you're ever likely to see anyone pull clipped in on an XC mtb with his saddle at full height. One of the most difficult moves to make look stylish at all on any mtb and he's pulling it off. While leading a WC XC race. if this isn't rad to you. something is dead inside you.
I'd like to see @mymodel6's best lookback attempt in his FERRARI... er.. .on his Ebike I mean.
Genuinely. I love old skool BMX tricks like turndowns, tables, euro tables and lookbacks.

The only issue I have with bike saddle aesthetics is seeing any top end bike with a big fat saddle attached or any bike with it's saddle angled nose down. I just find either of those things totally ugly. Not whether the saddle is at pedalling height or not. I actually wish Spesh had got it right with their tilting dropper. Because the spesh post was so bad most folk don't even get the piont of it. Before droppers all my mtb saddles were fitted nose up DJ/DH style with a QR seat collar and they all spent more time slammed than up. Back then I thought nothing of doing entire (2hr plus) XC rides stood up the entire ride. Droppers actually made me a weaker and lazier rider. unfortunately (as can be seen in my top pic) most droppers don't even have the adjustment to run your saddle as nose up as I would like...
 
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R120

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Apr 13, 2018
7,819
9,185
Surrey
Perhaps its time for the obligatory bike porn thread, everyone get your valves to 6 o'clock and those logos lined up.
 

hgray

New Member
Sep 24, 2018
10
14
SoCal USA
Saddle up...
IMG_3269.jpeg

Saddle down...
IMG_3287.jpeg

Btw, after a few rides, I think the Rockshox Revelation fork probably isn't cutting it as I initially thought..any recommendations?..or any adjustments I should be making. I had my LBS set the sag (as I am clueless on how to set it) based on my weight and height. But I feel like I'm bottoming out after jumps or drops. That red rubber band on the fork are pushed all the way up after my rides. Thanks.
 

Levo Lution

New Member
Oct 10, 2018
71
55
Slovakia
Nice, the only thing I could here was your enthusiasm :)
Saddle up...
View attachment 6173
Saddle down... View attachment 6174
Btw, after a few rides, I think the Rockshox Revelation fork probably isn't cutting it as I initially thought..any recommendations?..or any adjustments I should be making. I had my LBS set the sag (as I am clueless on how to set it) based on my weight and height. But I feel like I'm bottoming out after jumps or drops. That red rubber band on the fork are pushed all the way up after my rides. Thanks.
What size is the bike?
 

mymodel6

New Member
Oct 2, 2018
74
52
Hertfordshire
Saddle up...
View attachment 6173
Saddle down... View attachment 6174
Btw, after a few rides, I think the Rockshox Revelation fork probably isn't cutting it as I initially thought..any recommendations?..or any adjustments I should be making. I had my LBS set the sag (as I am clueless on how to set it) based on my weight and height. But I feel like I'm bottoming out after jumps or drops. That red rubber band on the fork are pushed all the way up after my rides. Thanks.

How much better does your bike look with the saddle down!!! :)

Seriously though, your forks have marks on the stanchion in % of sag.
You set your air pressure so that when you are standing on the bike in a balanced riding position, those legends line up with the lip of the dust wiper (you need a friend/partner/servant to help with this). If you do mostly DH, you want it set somewhere between 30-35%, for a more trail riding setup, go for around 25-28%, it says it clearly on the fork leg, you can't go wrong, that's the first step.

Now if your using too much travel, which is easy to do with the Debonair spring due to the positive/negative air chamber size ratio, add volume spacers.
You should have three volume spacers that came with your fork/bike, i'm positive you'll sort it with just that, but if it's still not supporting you enough with all three spacers installed, increase compression damping a bit at a time, that's all there is to it.

It's all about experimentation, and don't be afraid to have a go because the only mechanical thing you need to do is let the air out, remove the spring side top cap, put a spacer or spacers in, replace the top cap and pump it up again, which if you have the right tool and a shock pump, is literally a two minute job.

You definitely do not need to change your fork, unless you need more/less travel, stiffness, looks or any other attribute a different fork can provide, the spring and damper tech in the Revelations is as good as you'll get on anything else.

Stick with it and have a play, if you get stuck we're all here to help :)
 
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sirshan

Active member
Oct 2, 2018
99
69
Oakland, CA USA
Saddle up...
View attachment 6173
Saddle down... View attachment 6174
Btw, after a few rides, I think the Rockshox Revelation fork probably isn't cutting it as I initially thought..any recommendations?..or any adjustments I should be making. I had my LBS set the sag (as I am clueless on how to set it) based on my weight and height. But I feel like I'm bottoming out after jumps or drops. That red rubber band on the fork are pushed all the way up after my rides. Thanks.

Try adding Tokens. If not, Rockshox Lyrik is certainly a beast. I run it about 15psi above recommended for my preference.
 

Gary

Old Tartan Bollocks
Author
Subscriber
Mar 29, 2018
10,496
10,686
the internet
Before going crazy adding tokens.
He clearly doesn't have enough pressure in the fork in the first place.

tokens simply alter the spring curve making the fork spring more progressive.
 

Swissrob

Well-known member
Sep 4, 2018
326
298
Switzerland
Saddle up...
View attachment 6173
Saddle down... View attachment 6174
Btw, after a few rides, I think the Rockshox Revelation fork probably isn't cutting it as I initially thought..any recommendations?..or any adjustments I should be making. I had my LBS set the sag (as I am clueless on how to set it) based on my weight and height. But I feel like I'm bottoming out after jumps or drops. That red rubber band on the fork are pushed all the way up after my rides. Thanks.
There is a thread here with a couple of good videos on fork set up. I thought the same until I really started adjusting, the thing is that until you (or me! ) can set up a suspension we are not really qualified to say it's not fit for purpose. Buy a shock pump and digital pressure gauge and just mess around with it recording settings as you go, maybe it will feel like shit but you won't do any longer term damage.
 

mymodel6

New Member
Oct 2, 2018
74
52
Hertfordshire
Before going crazy adding tokens.
He clearly doesn't have enough pressure in the fork in the first place.

tokens simply alter the spring curve making the fork spring more progressive.

Yes i do believe i did suggest he set the sag correctly in the first instance, then continue to a give a fairly concise step by step guide as to what to try next, all of it correct, and fail to see how you managed to convince yourself that what you just typed was worth reading?..
 

GunnyAmp

Member
Aug 25, 2018
40
27
Gunnison, CO
My LBS gave me the bad news that my Base Model bike was pushed back on delivery due to the motor issue. Now showing January but said they would know more next week. Ordered a Comp Carbon instead which was ready to ship.
 
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