I've run everywhere from 2/1/4 down to 1.5 degrees neg. You will get accelerated wear doing street km's on the inside of the fronts with anything over 1.5. If your tyres are symetrics you can just get them taken off the rims when they are getting down and swap your left tyres to the right and vice versa to get a fresh tread down on the inside. That'll buy you more street km's.
On the track a general rule of thumb is the more castor you have the less camber you'll need. You've got a good amount of caster there so you could get away with 1.75 degrees eg as a street/track compromise. I wouldn't choose your camber based on will I/will I not oversteer in mind. Your choice to remove the front bar and run the rear with 24mm will be the main bearing on that. I'd still personally still run a soft front bar. I'll try to dig out some pics of a Polo guy who was photographed through the same corner with/without the front bar connected and the front roll without was pretty dramatic. What I've found is when the car starts to lift the inside rear (which is what you want if you have a open diff) if the front opposite corner cant support the load (which it will find it harder to do with no bar) then it can start to really plough. eg on smooth flat tracks when running my front bar on hard I have to be more careful not to understeer on corner entry, but if I get that right it'll three wheels nicely through the apex and be quicker overall. On soft the front end will tip into corners with more reassurance and get the power down harder on exit, but its easier to overcook it at the apex. At proper tight hilllimbs ill always run it on soft though.
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