The cheapo Progressive 412 K75 shock is a almost a POS and is still probably a step-up from the K75 OEM shock from what I've read.
I eventually upgraded from a 412 to a Progressive 465 and it performs much better, for less than half of "a grand".
Modifying a rear shock with a plastic spacer sounds like a recipe for disaster to me.
Well I was thinking when I finally do replace it, it would be with another, stock shock, and that's gonna cost me.
The stock shock has lasted a good long time. More than that POS Progressive Shock, but it must have been the cheaper model, not the one you're talking about.
Well, it may be that no one else has tried to ramp up the "pre-load-ability" of the stock shock, so I'm going to try that bad boy modification and report back. If there's a safety concern I have it's with the front geometry changes and the possibility, perhaps the very remote possibility for wobbles/tank slappers, weird turn in etc. I'm not worried about the mod itself coming apart/off. It's in there pretty good, but you never know until you try. The bike's not due back on the road until Sept 1st, at which time I'll ride it down my "suspension set up road", i.e 5 miles of undulating pavement with many high speed compression hits, and that'll give me great feed back right away.
This mod has been on my mind for quite some time, so I had to scratch the itch. 12 years ago I had a then new, sport touring bike that's still being made and still very popular today. One criticism about the "first gen" models was the supposedly weak shock, as in it needed a stiffer spring. One rider went out and bought a Wibur's or an Ohlins, I forget which, super duper shock for a boat load of money. Great shock, for sure. However, shortly thereafter, other riders were modifying their stock shock by adding a spacer/washer under the spring, for a total cost of about 5.00 plus their time/labour. Buddy with the super duper shock reported, he tried the mod on his stock unit, and...it performed as good as the super duper shock. True story.