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Specialized Drops the Levo EVO: More Travel, Same Motor

Specialized Drops the Levo EVO: More Travel, Same Motor

It’s a week for e-bikes. We’ve had the newest crop of Avinox-powered bikes hit the market, we’ve seen the new Ibis Oso, and now we have yet another new Levo 4 from Specialized: the Levo 4 EVO. While the last Levo to drop, the Levo R, was a bit confusing, this new Levo EVO makes a lot more sense, and ditches the Genie shock that we’ve seen on the last few Specialized bike releases in favor of the latest RockShox ZEB and Vivid Air.

I wasn’t alone in confusion surrounding the Levo R, and Specialized clearly got the memo. Today, they’re beefing up the Levo 4 with more travel. Meet the Levo 4 EVO, the heavy-hitting sibling in a newly restructured Levo family. While the Levo R is for a demographic I have yet to encounter, and the standard Levo 4 is the daily driver, the EVO is the big dog built to laugh at a chairlift or shuttle.

With the Levo EVO, we now see a nice little family of Levo bikes. Mama bear, papa bear, and baby bear. I’ll let you decide which is which.

Specialized

The Levo Family Grows

Specialized is leaning hard into its “SuperNatural” DNA, but they’ve split the lineage into three distinct objectives or use cases. Personally, after a number of miles on the new Levo R, I see the intention behind the Levo 4 and Levo 4 Evo much clearer than that of the Levo R, which continues to confuse me.

Specialized


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Model

Mission

Travel (F/R)

Wheel Size

Levo R

Electric Rally (Fast & Light)

140mm / 130mm

29″ / 29″

Levo 4

Electric Trail (The All-Rounder)

160mm / 150mm

29″ / 27.5″

Levo 4 EVO

Electric Enduro (The Bruiser)

180mm / 170mm

29″ / 27.5″

Available at Specialized.com

No Genie in a Bottle

The most interesting thing about the EVO isn’t just the extra travel, it’s the intent. This isn’t a trail bike with a longer shock; it’s a gravity chassis that Specialized says is designed to stay “calm when the terrain turns violent.” We’re talking about 180mm of travel up front and 170mm out back via a new link and a RockShox Vivid Air.

Specialized

The kinematics have been retuned specifically to hold their shape under high-speed compressions. If you’ve ever felt an e-bike wallow or “buck” through a square-edge hit because of the extra motor weight, the EVO is addressing this with Specialized Ride Dynamics-tuned kinematics built specifically for this new chassis. It’s planted, predictable, and all without the Genie shock.

Despite the Genie being pretty amazing on the Levo R, Levo 4, and Stumpjumper 15 and 15 Evo, Specialized has decided to tune the suspension kinematics rather than the shock to achieve the desired ride feel. You won’t find the Float X Genie on any of the new Levo EVO build options, and each build gets a Rockshox Zeb and Rockshox Vivid Air.

Deven McCoy

The Motor

The heart of the beast is the 3.1 system. With 105 Nm of torque and 810 watts of peak power. But the numbers aren’t the main part of it’s the delivery. Specialized developed a really smooth system here. Every time I pedal a Levo these days, I’m aware of how intuitive and natural feeling the 3.1 and S-Works motors are. Plus, they sound a lot like an F1 car when you’re thumbing through the gears on a climb.

Specialized

  • CoreCoat: A fancy way of saying they encapsulated the motor windings to dump heat and kill noise.
  • HardDrive Gears: Full-metal gears with a specialized coating to ensure the bike doesn’t sound like a blender after a season of mud.
  • The Battery Swap: They’re calling the downtube the “Wattage Cottage.” It features a modular hatch that lets you swap between the stock 840Wh battery (for epic days) and a lighter 600Wh unit (for when you want the bike to feel more “flickable”).

Levo EVO Geometry

In typical Specialized fashion, the geometry is highly adjustable. Out of the box, the S4 size sits at a 63-degree head tube angle, which is pretty slack, but you can go a degree slacker or steeper if you see the need. Chainstays are 447mm, but can be tucked up to the BB with the flip chip in short for a 435mm chainstay.

Specialized

Specialized

  • Seat Tube Angle: 76° (Keeps you centered for the climb back up).
  • Chainstays: 435mm (Mullet setup keeps it snappy in the corners).
  • Adjustability: You can swap the headset cups to go +/- 1 degree and flip a chip at the chainstay to adjust the length by 11mm.

Turn the Levo 4 into the Levo EVO

Specialized isn’t gatekeeping this tech. If you already own a standard Levo 4, you can buy the EVO shock extension as an aftermarket upgrade. Throw on a 230×62.5mm shock and a 180mm fork, and you’ve effectively converted your trail bike into an enduro specialist. That’s a massive win for riders who don’t want to buy an entirely new bike.

Deven McCoy

Pricing and Builds

Levo 4 EVO Pro 

Specialized

Component

Specification

Motor

Specialized 3.1 Motor, 105Nm torque, 810W peak power

Battery

840Wh integrated; optional 280Wh Range Extender (Total 1,120Wh)

UI/Remote

MasterMind TCU, 2.2″ high-resolution customizable screen

Frame

FACT 11m carbon, 170mm travel, adjustable geometry, SWAT storage

Fork

SRAM FS ZEB Ultimate, 180mm travel, Charger 3.2 damper, ButterCups

Rear Shock

Vivid Ultimate air, 230×62.5mm, Linear XL spring, RCT2 damper

Drivetrain

SRAM XO Eagle Transmission (12-speed), 10-52t cassette

Brakes

SRAM Maven Silver, 4-piston hydraulic (220mm Front / 200mm Rear)

Wheels

Traverse HD Carbon rims with DT Swiss 350 hubs

Tires

Butcher (F) / Cannibal (R), GRID Gravity casing, T9 compound

Seatpost

Bike Yoke Revive Max 3.0 (S2: 125mm to S5/S6: 213mm)

Cockpit

Deity Speedway Carbon bars (810mm), Deity 35mm stem

Weight

24.4 kg (53 lb, 12.7 oz)

Price (USD)

$12,300

Levo 4 EVO Comp

Specialized

Component

Specification

Motor

Specialized 3.1 Motor, 105Nm torque, 810W peak power

Battery

840Wh integrated; optional 280Wh Range Extender

UI/Remote

MasterMind TCU, 2.2″ high-resolution customizable screen

Frame

FACT 11m carbon, 170mm travel, adjustable geometry, SWAT storage

Fork

SRAM FS ZEB Select, 180mm travel, Linear XL spring, Delta RC damper

Rear Shock

Vivid Select air, 230×62.5mm, Linear XL spring, RT damper

Drivetrain

SRAM S1000 Eagle AXS (12-speed), 10-52t cassette

Brakes

SRAM Maven Bronze, 4-piston hydraulic (220mm Front / 200mm Rear)

Wheels

Specialized hookless alloy rims, 30mm inner width

Tires

Butcher (F) / Cannibal (R), GRID Gravity casing, T9 compound

Seatpost

X-Fusion Manic, infinite adjustable (S2: 125mm to S4-S6: 190mm)

Cockpit

Specialized Alloy bars (780-800mm), Alloy Trail stem

Weight

25.16 kg (55 lb, 7.5 oz)

Price (USD)

$9,200

Final Thoughts

The Levo 4 EVO is for the rider who looks at a bike park and thinks, “I don’t need a lift ticket.” It’s a specialized tool for big terrain that promises to stay composed when you’re definitely not. Like the Stumpjumper gets an Evo treatment, it’s nice to see that come to the Levo space, and I could see this being a solid option for those who are already eyeing a Levo 4, overforking it, and picking up a Cascade link, but don’t want to mess around with warranty loopholes.

The current crop of Levo’s aren’t light, and even the Levo R is a pretty hefty number, but the surprising thing is that they don’t “feel” heavy when you get them on trail. That being said, I’ll put money on this trend continuing with the Levo EVO, and if you live somewhere where the trails are steep and demanding, this is a spectacular option if you don’t want to rely on always having a shuttle or your own power to winch yourself up the hill for laps.

Specialized

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