New guy here...I've been enjoying my Levo SL2 for 660 miles thus far. It's an incredible bike, but I do find myself bottoming the rear shock quite often. I was planning to increase my rear shock pressure a bit to compensate. My question is this, what exactly does this type of Cascade link do for the ride feel and performance? I hear the term 'progression' bandied about constantly in videos and in threads like this, but what does that actually mean. People talk in technical terms like leverage rates, etc. What I really want to know is how does what the Cascade link is doing technically translate to real-world performance and feel? For example, "I was bombing down a steep trail over roots and rocks. The bike used to do X with the stock suspension, but with the Cascade link it now does Y." Or, "When I land a nice jump the bike does this, whereas it used to do that." I want to understand. Thanks!
I realized that the smart thing to do would be to get ChatGPT's take on this topic as well.

Here's what it said, and hopefully this benefits others considering changes to their bike:
The easiest way to think about it is this:
Adding air pressure makes the
whole rear end firmer everywhere.
A
Cascade link changes
how the rear suspension gets firmer as it moves through the travel. That’s why people keep talking about “progression.”
On the Levo SL2, the stock bike has
150 mm rear travel with a
210x55 shock. Cascade’s current Levo SL link takes that to
160 mm rear travel with the stock shock and increases progression from
12% to 24%; Cascade also says to run it in the
high shock-position only.
What “progression” actually means
“Leverage ratio” is just how much the rear wheel moves compared with how much the shock moves. A progressive bike starts with
more leverage on the shock and then
loses leverage deeper in the stroke, so the rear end becomes harder to compress near the end of travel. In plain English:
the first part of the travel is easier to use, the last part fights back more.
So when people say the Cascade link makes the SL2 “more progressive,” they mean the bike does a better job of
saving some resistance for the back half of the travel, instead of using travel too easily and then smacking the bumper on bigger hits. Cascade’s own explanation is that more progression helps you balance
small-bump sensitivity and
bottom-out resistance without having to rely as much on
over-springing the shock or cranking in extra damping.
What that feels like on trail
Here’s the real-world translation.
On a steep, rough descent with roots and rocks, a more linear / less progressive setup can feel great at first because the rear wheel is very willing to move. But if you’re pushing hard, it can also feel like the bike
sits deeper and deeper, uses travel quickly, and then gives you a sharper “whoa” at the biggest compression or g-out. With the Cascade link, the usual goal is that the rear still starts the stroke willingly, but when you hit the big root stack, square edge, or compression, the bike is
less likely to blow through the last third of travel. The feeling riders chase is more like:
“it tracked the chatter, but it didn’t collapse when the real hit arrived.” That is the whole point of doubling the progression number from 12% to 24%.
On jumps or drops, the stock setup can feel like it’s happy and active but sometimes
lands deep and gets close to a hard bottom-out if you come in a little flat or heavy. The more progressive link is meant to give you more
end-stroke ramp, so the landing feels more like the bike
catches itself instead of just running out of travel. That often translates to a little more confidence on jump faces, g-outs, and hard landings, because there’s more support left in reserve when you really load the rear.
In corners, pumps, and rollers, more progression usually feels like more
support deeper in the stroke. The bike is less likely to sink excessively when you really push into a berm or pump through a transition. Riders often describe that as more
pop or more of a
platform to push against. That’s an inference from what a more progressive leverage curve does mechanically, not a universal promise, because shock tune still matters a lot.
Why Specialized didn’t make it that way from the factory
This is the important counterpoint: stock is not “wrong.” Specialized later said they intentionally moved the Levo SL to a
slightly lower starting leverage point and a bit less progression because they found it improved
consistency and control through the travel and made shock setup easier. In other words, Specialized chose a more broadly agreeable, easier-to-set-up feel, while Cascade is aimed at riders who are pushing hard enough that they want more ramp and more margin at the end of the stroke.
So what should
If you’re only bottoming on the
biggest hits once in a while, that’s normal and I wouldn’t chase it too hard. If you’re bottoming
often, your first move is still the cheap one:
add a little pressure and/or
add a volume spacer if your shock supports it. The downside is that pressure makes the whole travel firmer, and volume spacers improve end-stroke resistance but can come with some trade-off in small-bump feel. Pinkbike’s Genie explainer describes that exact air-spring tradeoff: more end-stroke progressivity from spacers can slightly hurt small-bump sensitivity.
That’s where the Cascade link becomes interesting: it’s a bigger, more expensive way to solve the same problem more elegantly. Instead of just making the shock stiffer everywhere, it changes the bike’s kinematics so you can often keep a
plusher, grippier first half while getting a
firmer, more supportive second half. That’s the sales pitch in one sentence.
My plain-English verdict
If your complaint is:
- “I love the bike, but on hard descents and bigger hits it uses travel too easily and clanks the rear too often”
then the Cascade link makes sense.
If your complaint is only:
- “I occasionally see the O-ring near the end of the shaft”
then I would try pressure / sag / token tuning first before spending link money.
The cleanest summary is:
- More air pressure = firmer everywhere.
- More volume spacer = more ramp in the shock.
- Cascade link = more ramp in the bike itself.
For the kind of rider who is hitting the Levo SL2 hard enough to bottom it regularly, the expected before/after is:
- Before: plush, active, but easier to blow through the rear travel on hard compressions and landings.
- After: still active, but with more support and a more noticeable “catch” in the last third of travel.
If you want, I can turn this into a very practical decision tree for
your Levo SL2: “add 5–10 psi,” “add a spacer,” or “yes, you’re the kind of rider the Cascade link is probably for.”