My 20 cents ............. I'd cut the brake caliper mounts off the original flange and bolt the caliper to the spacer plate, that way any camber or toe change (from original) won't affect the relationship between the caliper and rotor ie. they will always be in line. I'd also make the spacer out of alloy to save weight and hellicoil the caliper bolts. By not using longer (through) bolts, removing the dust cover and cutting off the original cast caliper brackets there may not be much unsprung (evil) weight increase.
In a FWD car I don't change the rear toe or camber settings very often, I find that the rear swaybar is the best handling balance tuning method. That and the rear shock damper settings. Rear spring changes are really only for the extremes of tracks, Philip Island for example needs a spring rate increase due to its long, high speed (lat G) corners.
In comparison I do change the front camber and toe settings depending on the track, including biasing of the camber for clockwise or anti clockwise tracks.
Cheers
Gary
Golf Mk7.5 R, Volvo S60 Polestar, Skyline R32GTST
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