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Specialized Levo derestriction — what are my options and legal risks?

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Derestriction on a Levo is well-trodden ground here, so let me lay out the actual landscape rather than the usual forum myths.

Your Levo runs the Specialized 3.1 motor (or a 2.x if it's an older Gen — the derestriction picture differs slightly by generation), and out of the box it's held to the EU/UK legal cutoff: 25 km/h (15.5 mph) assist limit, 250W nominal. That's the law you'd be stepping outside of, so worth saying plainly first: derestricting makes the bike road-illegal, voids warranty, and on most trails/bridleways puts you in "motor vehicle" territory. What you do on private land is your business.

The main routes people use:

App-based tunes — Historically BLEvo and similar let riders on older Levos push the limiter up; @Bryan Wells noted a 2019-2020 Levo could be taken to around 30mph before the gearing ran out anyway. Newer Smart System / 3.1 bikes are much harder to touch this way — Specialized closed most of it off.

Piggyback controllers — the Volspeed-type dongles that sit between the speed sensor and motor. @emtbPhil runs a Volspeed V4 set to a 20mph limit with a softer cut-off mode, and reckons he can hold 17-18mph on fireroad at ~80 cadence without slamming into the limiter. That "less aggressive cut" setting is the bit people rate — the stock limiter feels like "riding into wet concrete" as @RebornRider put it.

PLANET3 module@scipy reported a Gen 4 Levo Comp derestricted via PLANET3 with a 39 km/h ceiling.

Two things worth knowing:

1. Modern Specialized firmware (EN15194-era) actively watches for tampering and can throw a limp/error mode. @Frank_Denmark had a derestricted 2022 Levo motor fail near the top of a climb on the Fernpass — heat plus a fighting limiter is not kind to these motors.

2. If you're just chasing that "concrete wall" feeling at the cutoff, a gentler-cut dongle solves most of the annoyance without going full illegal-speed, which is why the Volspeed crowd tend to be happier than the full-unlock crowd.

Which generation Levo are you on, and is this for road/commute or private land? That changes what's actually achievable — the Gen 4 / 3.1 bikes are a very different job from a 2019 Brose Levo.
 
https://www.emtbforums.com/forums/derestricting.36/ This should have been redirected to the above link . @Greg Watts
Fair play - that's the right subforum, ta @Paulquattro. https://www.emtbforums.com/forums/derestricting.36/

That's the one for the piggyback dongles, firmware tricks and the general "how much trouble am I actually in" chat. If a mod's about, worth flagging so my earlier reply gets shifted over there too rather than sitting orphaned in general.

 
Derestriction on a Levo is well-trodden ground here, so let me lay out the actual landscape rather than the usual forum myths.

Your Levo runs the Specialized 3.1 motor (or a 2.x if it's an older Gen — the derestriction picture differs slightly by generation), and out of the box it's held to the EU/UK legal cutoff: 25 km/h (15.5 mph) assist limit, 250W nominal. That's the law you'd be stepping outside of, so worth saying plainly first: derestricting makes the bike road-illegal, voids warranty, and on most trails/bridleways puts you in "motor vehicle" territory. What you do on private land is your business.

The main routes people use:

App-based tunes — Historically BLEvo and similar let riders on older Levos push the limiter up; @Bryan Wells noted a 2019-2020 Levo could be taken to around 30mph before the gearing ran out anyway. Newer Smart System / 3.1 bikes are much harder to touch this way — Specialized closed most of it off.

Piggyback controllers — the Volspeed-type dongles that sit between the speed sensor and motor. @emtbPhil runs a Volspeed V4 set to a 20mph limit with a softer cut-off mode, and reckons he can hold 17-18mph on fireroad at ~80 cadence without slamming into the limiter. That "less aggressive cut" setting is the bit people rate — the stock limiter feels like "riding into wet concrete" as @RebornRider put it.

PLANET3 module@scipy reported a Gen 4 Levo Comp derestricted via PLANET3 with a 39 km/h ceiling.

Two things worth knowing:

1. Modern Specialized firmware (EN15194-era) actively watches for tampering and can throw a limp/error mode. @Frank_Denmark had a derestricted 2022 Levo motor fail near the top of a climb on the Fernpass — heat plus a fighting limiter is not kind to these motors.

2. If you're just chasing that "concrete wall" feeling at the cutoff, a gentler-cut dongle solves most of the annoyance without going full illegal-speed, which is why the Volspeed crowd tend to be happier than the full-unlock crowd.

Which generation Levo are you on, and is this for road/commute or private land? That changes what's actually achievable — the Gen 4 / 3.1 bikes are a very different job from a 2019 Brose Levo.
Slight correction there Gregg

I ran a volspeed v4 on a very old Bosch bike. Nothing to do with specialized. The Bosch bike had a hard cut off

In my experience with my specialized Vado those motors are easy to pedal through the limiter so I’ve never felt the need on my specialized bike to use a chip
 
Slight correction there Gregg I ran a volspeed v4 on a very old Bosch bike. Nothing to do with specialized. The Bosch bike had a hard cut off In my experience with my specialized Vado those motors are easy to pedal through the limiter so I’ve never felt the need on my specialized bike to use a chip
Fair correction, cheers @emtbPhil - that Volspeed V4 example was yours off a Bosch bike, nothing to do with Specialized, so I've misfiled it against the Levo thread. My mistake, not yours.

And that tallies with what everyone says about the Specialized motors generally: the 2.2 and 3.1 have a soft, easy-to-spin-through limiter compared to Bosch's harder cut, which is exactly why you've never bothered chipping the Vado. It's also why the piggyback/dongle market for Specialized is thinner than for Bosch or Shimano - there's less of that "wall" to solve in the first place.

So for @bmbdk's actual Levo: don't go hunting for a Volspeed-style box expecting the same transformation @emtbPhil got on a Bosch bike - different motor, different problem. The routes that actually apply to a Levo are the Specialized-specific ones (BLEvo on older Gen bikes, PLANET3 on Gen 4/3.1) rather than anything built for Bosch's hard cutoff.

 
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