Will everybody quit jumping all over each other and consider this for a second. Shotts, Christo, and Darren can all be "right" from their own perspectives.
I think it has been thourougly explained by Christo, Darren, and others how the N74L does not gain hardly any travel if a 2 inch bumpstop extension is used. (.6 inches to be exact)
On the other hand, Shotts has claimed that it has made a world of difference to him since he added the N74L's.
Well guess what, they're all right!
The real difference here is that Christo and Darren are looking at this from a different point of view than John is. They are looking at what it would take to run an N74L. If it takes a 2" bumpstop extension to get the job done, then you're gaining droop but loosing compression. Very little gain to be had.
John is looking at this from a different viewpoint. Long before he added the N74L's, he used a 2" bumpstop extension to keep his 315's from rubbing the wheel wells. When he did this, he lost 2 inches of compression on his orginal N101's. He ran this way for quite a while.
Then a year later, (or however long it was) he added the N74L's to his 100. Voila, he instantly added 2.6 inches of travel to his suspension. Looking at it from his point of view, he just gained some serious travel with a pair of shocks. But that gain is realized because of past changes that John made to his rig instead of doing this all at once.
Now, for the rest of us that aren't currently using bumpstop extensions, adding the N74L's will not give us the same amount of increase as John experienced because we aren't currently loosing that initial 2 inches of compression. Unless we can work out a way to add the N74L's without adding the 2 inch bumpstop extensions.
If someone can pull one of their rear shocks and measure the distance once the axle is compressed to the bumpstop, we can then know how much bumpstop extension is needed, if any at all. Is anyone willing to do this for the group?