I'd suggest running a couple of layers of race tape over the top of the threaded sleeve, that'll stop the crud getting in, then wrap the tape around the threads. You may have to replace the tape occasionally, on the race cars I do it about every 3 or 4 race meetings. You could put the tender/helpers at the top, but if you can keep the main spring trapped at full droop I'd just leave them off.
Measuring to bump stop contact, it'll take me longer to write this than for you to do it. Count how many coils are in the main spring, then measure the diameter of the wire. For example, 8 turns of 11 mm wire = 88 mm height at coil bind. With the springs out of the car and the shocks bolted up, jack up one side. What you need is for the bump stop to contact long before there is 88 mm between the spring seats. Well over 100 mm as a minimum, so the bump stop has to be compressed a fair bit (say half its free height) before the spring gets anywhere near coil bind.
Rule of thumb, the front roll centre needs to be somewhere around the crankshaft centre line, so on a strut based car that means lower control arm inner bush pivot points higher than outer ball joint pivot points.
On a FWD car the rear roll centre (CoR) needs to be as low as possible, ground level is not a bad place to start, which is hard (impossible) with torsion beam suspension (without engineering it for a Mufford link). Since you can't get your CoR anywhere near where we would like it, the next best is to lower the CoG. So to answer your question, negative rake is the go as long as there is enough suspension travel. That's why adjusting the rear ride height is a good handling tuning tool.
With a higher spring rate the rear will settle less under load than it will with a softer spring rate. Consequently it will rise less when you take the load out.
I think I may have suggested it before, but just in case, stick a small note book and a pencil (pens run out of ink at inconvenient times) in your glove box and write down everything that you measure. Ride height (centre of wheel to guard) is an important one. So next time you know what height did what last time. These days I carry an iPad with me, with everything on every car from every session loaded into individual spreadsheets that are uploaded to the cloud. That way I can look stuff up anywhere anytime with my iPhone, iPad or on the Mac at home.
I hope that answered all of your questions, if not ask away ................
Cheers
Gary
Last edited by Sydneykid; 09-11-2017 at 12:02 PM.
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