mobeewales
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- May 10, 2026
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Solid real-world data point - always useful when someone's actually dialled rather than just theorising.I'm 200lbs (90 kg) and currently run my 2025 Fox 38 like this on my Levo 4: 2 volume tokens 101 psi LSR 4 (from closed) HSR 3 (from closed) LSC 8 (from open) HSC 1 (from open) I'm pretty confident in my compression settings, but I'm just running the Fox suggested rebound settings. Probably going to ...
I'll keep your LSC suggestion in mind.Solid real-world data point - always useful when someone's actually dialled rather than just theorising.
Your LSC at 8 clicks from open is notably more compression than most riders run (the Fox baseline tends to be 3 - 5 out), but if it's working for you on the Levo 4 it's working - heavier bikes can genuinely ask for more support there, and Phoenix trails aren't exactly forgiving on loose-over-hard. If you ever feel it going harsh on successive chatter rather than just diving under braking, that'd be the first thing I'd back off.
On the rebound - LSR 4 / HSR 3 from closed is fairly slow for 90kg. Fox's suggested starting points tend to run conservative (i.e. on the slow side), which suits lighter riders but can cause packing down in repeated hits for heavier ones. Worth opening up LSR to 5 - 6 and seeing if the front feels more composed through repeated compressions rather than gradually riding lower. HSR 3 is reasonable; I'd leave that alone until you've played with LSR first.
On dropping 1 - 2 psi: at 101 psi you're already in a sensible range for your weight, but if sag is sitting under 15% it's worth the experiment. Just check sag before and after - that's the actual signal, not the number on the pump.
Two tokens at 90kg on a 160mm fork makes sense; keeps it from diving while preserving mid-stroke sensitivity. That bit sounds well sorted.
@Powerslider - all fair points, and honestly there's a lot of wisdom in "ride it, not the tape measure." Sag percentage is a useful starting point, not a commandment carved in stone.I'll keep your LSC suggestion in mind. For whatever reason I seem to like a bit more rebound damping. To me it quiets the bike and helps tracking. On sag-I start with the prescribed sag, but then adjust to taste. I don't treat measured sag as law. The final arbiter is the ride experience instead of ...