The bike is a Levo Gen3, I did read that there maybe some difference with the leverage that the Genie is designed for on the Levo Gen4
Good, this is exactly what I needed. There's even a real-world forum post from someone who did this exact swap on a Gen 3. Let me now write a focused, accurate reply.
@jpgell70 - good spot, and you're right to flag it. This is the key thing to understand about fitting a Genie to a Gen 3.
The core issue: the Genie was co-developed with and tuned around the Gen 4 Levo's leverage curve - not the Gen 3's. Here's what that means in practice:
Specialized essentially put all the progression into the shock itself, rather than building it into the frame's kinematic curve.
The Gen 4 has a relatively flat leverage rate, and the Genie's outer air sleeve handles the first 70% of travel with a large volume for a plush, coil-like feel, then cuts off at 70% to dramatically reduce air volume and ramp up progressively for the final 30%.
The Gen 3, by contrast, has its own progressive leverage curve baked into the frame kinematics. The Gen 3 borrowed the Stumpjumper Evo's progressive leverage curve, with some tweaks for the torque and power delivered by the drive unit.
The leverage ratio gets more progressive deeper into travel - higher leverage at the start for small-bump sensitivity, losing leverage as it goes deeper to avoid a harsh bottom-out.
So the Genie sitting on top of an already progressive frame curve could stack up: you might find the end-stroke ramp more abrupt than expected.
The good news: someone's already done exactly this swap. There's a real-world account from a Gen 3 owner who fitted a Genie takeoff and reported:
"Biggest improvement over the X2 is midstroke support on jumps and berms - the X2 felt dead. Smoother bottom-out resistance at the end of the stroke... The X2 felt harsher as it got near the end." They also found the Genie smoother on repeated square-edge hits.
And the reassuring bit for setup: they reported easy setup, and ended up on the same PSI as the X2.
Practical setup steer for Gen 3:
•
Start with fewer spacers than you'd run on a Gen 4. Because your Gen 3 frame already adds progression, the Genie's outer-sleeve volume is doing less work to supplement a flat curve. Stock/minimal spacers first, then only add if you're truly blowing through the travel.
• The mandatory part of the Genie's progression is set by the ratio between inner and outer volumes and the cut-off point - you can't change that. The optional part is tuned via spacers in the outer volume.
So the end-stroke ramp is fixed; spacers only affect the early/mid stroke. • If you find the end stroke feels harsh or abrupt (which would be the stacking effect of Genie + Gen 3 kinematics), you'd want to
reduce your pressure slightly and run less sag rather than adding spacers.
• The 210×52.5 travel spacer option I mentioned previously becomes more useful on a Gen 3 than it would be on a Gen 4, for exactly this reason - slightly reducing stroke can take the edge off that end-progression stack.
Importantly, the fit is physically the same - the Gen 3 was designed to accept standard metric 210×55 shocks with piggyback clearance, so there's no mounting issue.
Try it on standard spec first and see - plenty of Gen 3 owners seem to find the Genie an upgrade overall even without optimising for the different kinematics.