I'll keep it short as we have a busy day today and I only got back from SA yesterday. Glad to hear it's working for you Sam, some quick observations;
You shouldn't ever have to "back in" a FWD car at a corner, it should pivot on its front end on turn in and then you should be able to pretty much straight line it from mid corner (before the apex) to exit. What's you are experiencing is due the lack of rear toe out, it really does need it. For rear camber I'd suggest 2 degrees neg as a minimum, maybe 2.5 degrees. That helps to mitigate the high speed nervousness that the toe out gives. Before you roll the guards give it a measure.
The above also helps with the LSD effectiveness as power is applied pretty much in a straight line.
Let me know the Eibach front spring part number and I'll check the spec (PM or email if you prefer). If we can get a 200 mm free height spring with the same rate, # of coils and wire diameter then that might just fix your problem. It's simple, but does take some getting one's head around it as to what is actually happening. If for example you are using 40 mm of the 180 mm free height to hold the static weight and it coil binds at, say, 80 mm then you only have 60 mm of travel. If you have a 200 mm spring (same rate etc), which of course also needs 40 mm to hold the car up, then you have 80 mm of spring travel (before it coil binds). Make sense?
FWIW I have never used helper/tender springs on the front of a FWD car, ever.
I'm guessing you were using engine overrun braking to preserve the brakes, but for track work you really shouldn't especially if you are trail braking on turn in. It makes the rear end more nervous as you are in effect changing the brake bias to more front, less rear. This is especially noticeable at Wakefield in the kink.
It never ceases to amaze me how something that works perfectly everyday (like changing gears) can be a real pain on the track. The slightest weakness gets amplified, many times over.
Cheers
Gary
Last edited by Sydneykid; 22-01-2018 at 12:38 PM.
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