in short:
flip the chip to get a higher bottom bracket and more nimble steering
--------------------
the story in case you aren't already getting your 6 and 5 mm Allen key
I just came back from a 1000km holiday in the Auvergne, with my 2019 Levo S-Works
i used it for 4000km in total
when i got it the first thing that set it apart from my Specialized Camber (a 110mm trail bike) was that it had terrible understeer.
i adapted, more breaking before corners, more pronounced leaning etc.
after a few weeks, (i had to work) i went into the forest, of course, i loved it, overall it's the best bike i have ever had, motor or not.
but, i had a lot of pedal strokes.
i had read something about a flip-chip, but assumed the default was the best setting, and the flip was only required to use 27.6 wheels
i was so wrong, i just flipped the switch, the difference is immediate, i went home zig-zagging through the "poles" or whatever they are called, i would not even have attempted that before.
i can't say this is better for everybody, but it is definitely for me, even on downhills i wanted a more nibble bike, not a more stable one.
IMO the "low" default setting is a mistake.
did you try both settings ?, if you did, what did you prefer? what is your bike size, and your height?
I'm 171cm, the bike is a medium
-- how to --
you need a 6 and a 6mm Allen key
at first i got confused by the orientation of the bottom screw (the one on the flip side) and went the wrong way, making it imposible to lose using the small built in tool.
hint, you have to turn left, not right
(im an idiot)
so i required a longer lever to loosen the lower of the two screws (6mm)
the top one is easy
i removed all air pressure from the shock, i guess that's indispensable.
beware that when you detach the shock the chip itself might fall down, making it harder to know what position to flip it too, so remove the shock carefully
if you did what i did, and let every thing fall on the pavement, put the chip back in with the hole farthest from the shock
put the shock back, and pump it up to about one PSI for half a kilo of body weight (double the pressure of the fork)
flip the chip to get a higher bottom bracket and more nimble steering
--------------------
the story in case you aren't already getting your 6 and 5 mm Allen key
I just came back from a 1000km holiday in the Auvergne, with my 2019 Levo S-Works
i used it for 4000km in total
when i got it the first thing that set it apart from my Specialized Camber (a 110mm trail bike) was that it had terrible understeer.
i adapted, more breaking before corners, more pronounced leaning etc.
after a few weeks, (i had to work) i went into the forest, of course, i loved it, overall it's the best bike i have ever had, motor or not.
but, i had a lot of pedal strokes.
i had read something about a flip-chip, but assumed the default was the best setting, and the flip was only required to use 27.6 wheels
i was so wrong, i just flipped the switch, the difference is immediate, i went home zig-zagging through the "poles" or whatever they are called, i would not even have attempted that before.
i can't say this is better for everybody, but it is definitely for me, even on downhills i wanted a more nibble bike, not a more stable one.
IMO the "low" default setting is a mistake.
did you try both settings ?, if you did, what did you prefer? what is your bike size, and your height?
I'm 171cm, the bike is a medium
-- how to --
you need a 6 and a 6mm Allen key
at first i got confused by the orientation of the bottom screw (the one on the flip side) and went the wrong way, making it imposible to lose using the small built in tool.
hint, you have to turn left, not right
(im an idiot)
so i required a longer lever to loosen the lower of the two screws (6mm)
the top one is easy
i removed all air pressure from the shock, i guess that's indispensable.
beware that when you detach the shock the chip itself might fall down, making it harder to know what position to flip it too, so remove the shock carefully
if you did what i did, and let every thing fall on the pavement, put the chip back in with the hole farthest from the shock
put the shock back, and pump it up to about one PSI for half a kilo of body weight (double the pressure of the fork)