Maybe I'm not getting what this is for, but can't you just put two separate spacers on the outside of the bearings using the existing through bolt without redrilling the linkages?
daifanshi, naeTech is talking about a spacer between the outboard bearings that appears as a tube labeled "spacer" in the attached picture of the hightower v2 linkage. They bridge the inner races of the bearings accrding to naeTech's diagram. The hightower has them and the bxt doesn't. I experienced some binding and friction at low torques from these pivots. The spacers may help with this, but it looks like you have to modify the linkage and fabricate the spacers.
naeTech, did you add 2 spacers to the lower linkage as in the attached diagram?
While the BXT 117 may look like a hightower v2 copy, the kinematics, weird stuck suspension problem, and lack of linkage refinement like spacers suggest the copy isn't very good
. The progression of the leverage curve is significantly greater on the BXT (some might say extreme) if naeTech's model is accurate. I don't think you could call the kinematics the same.
All sizes of the hightower 2 accept a 55mm stroke shock, but the same stroke on the BXT 117 will cause suspension to jam at bottom out. As I understand, the 2020 hightower 2 had a 52.5mm stroke shock for "140mm" travel and the next year they shipped the same frame with
55mm of stroke for "145mm" travel in all sizes. I tested and jammed it with 55mm stroke and low air pressure on a size medium. naeTech says it happened at 52mm of stroke on size small.
If you revert to a 50mm stroke shock, the actual travel on this frame seems to be about 136mm, and the progressivity may make it difficult to use full travel. The takeaway is that the suspension travel falls short on this frame not because of marketing exaggeration but a defect that prevents you from using a 55mm stroke shock as designed. (Edit: This may happen only on some size frames. See reply #61 for more info)[/b]
If you have this frame, I suggest you try for yourself because it could be dangerous on the trail (although the high progressivity might make it difficult to reach the bottom out point). I believe you will need at least a bit of air pressure in the shock to get the suspension to jam. It's the extension pressure that cams the linkage into bottom out position.