SETUP DATABASE

Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight) Setup

Suspension adjuster reference for the Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight) (2025) (Supersport / Middleweight). See which clickers and ride-height adjusters it has, the baseline you should start from, and which symptom maps to which adjuster.

Last updated: 2025
On this page
  1. 0101 — Adjusters
  2. 0202 — Baseline setup
  3. 0303 — Common symptoms
  4. 0404 — FAQ

01What this bike lets you adjust

Every change you can make to the Panigale V2 (Lightweight)’s suspension falls into one of the circuits below. Knowing which adjusters you actually have is the first step — there’s no point chasing a high-speed compression fix on a bike that only offers preload.

Front fork

  • Low-speed compression
  • High-speed compression
  • Rebound damping
  • High-speed rebound
  • Spring preload
  • Fork height (ride height)
  • Spring rate (swappable)

Rear shock

  • Low-speed compression
  • High-speed compression
  • Rebound damping
  • High-speed rebound
  • Spring preload
  • Ride height (shock length)
  • Spring rate (swappable)
Where are the exact clicker limits?
This page is the map of which adjusters the Panigale V2 (Lightweight) has. The factory-accurate number of clickson each one — so you always know your range and never wind past a stop — lives in the Apex Wizard app, free.

02Where to start — the baseline

Whatever the Panigale V2 (Lightweight) offers, the order of operations is always the same. Start from the OEM clicker baseline (count every adjuster from fully closed), set tyre pressures, then set sag before you touch a single damping clicker.

  • Tyre pressure first.It moves the chassis more than any clicker. Start from a known cold target — see the track day tyre pressure guide.
  • Then sag.Aim for roughly 30–38 mm front and 25–30 mm rear rider sag on a sportbike, then verify against the manual. Full method in the sag guide.
  • Then one clicker at a time. Change one thing, ride the same reference, log it. The full loop is in the suspension tuning guide.

03Match the symptom to the adjuster

On the Panigale V2 (Lightweight), as on any bike, diagnose by the corner phase where the problem shows up — not the symptom alone. A few of the most common ones:

04Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight) setup FAQ

What suspension adjustments does the Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight) have?
Up front the Panigale V2 (Lightweight) offers low-speed compression, high-speed compression, rebound damping, high-speed rebound, spring preload, fork height (ride height) and spring rate (swappable). At the rear it offers low-speed compression, high-speed compression, rebound damping, high-speed rebound, spring preload, ride height (shock length) and spring rate (swappable). Tyre pressure and chassis geometry round out the picture. Apex Wizard stores the factory-accurate clicker limits for each of these so you always know how many clicks of range you actually have.
Does the Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight) have high-speed compression adjustment?
Yes. The Panigale V2 (Lightweight) splits compression damping into separate high- and low-speed circuits at both ends, so you can tune sharp kerb and bump absorption separately from braking and drive pitch.
What suspension sag should I set on the Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight)?
As a starting point for a sportbike, aim for roughly 30–38 mm of front rider sag and 25–30 mm at the rear, then confirm against the service manual. Always set sag before touching any clicker — it's the geometry baseline everything else depends on.

Get the Ducati Panigale V2 (Lightweight) factory baseline.

Apex Wizard ships the Panigale V2 (Lightweight)'s exact clicker limits and a guided setup logbook — log changes, compare sessions, and get symptom-based recommendations. Free.

Apex WizardFree to Download
Get