Strangely enough, I have 250lb fronts, 8 working coils and a free length of 228mm, so roughly 10". I like it but then again I've always liked firmly damped/sprung cars so maybe that's just me.
On adjustable Protech dampers with the perch right down the car looked almost like an S2 it was so low. In the end I raised it slightly but it's still a touch lower than standard all round. No recent pics, the one shown was a few years ago when I'd stopped tinkering with it.
When I did mine I did a lot of research into what others had done, what Lotus did originally and where I thought I wanted to be. One thing that I ended up with was to retain the same F/R suspension frequencies to what Lotus had originally. So what I'm saying is that I wouldn't change the front without looking at the rear as well.
A small change, say 10-20lbs, won't be drastic because the coil works at an angle and so reduces the effective spring rate. It's different at the rear because it's practically vertical so you get the full rate as the effective rate. But if you retain the OEM rears (75lb) and go to 150lb front you'll be altering the F/R balance quite a bit.
On my dimensions/calcs, OEM frequencies were 1.2F, 1.4R, a ratio of 0.92. With 150/75 it's 1.4F, 1.4R, an equal match. My original thoughts were for an equal ratio from what I read on the internet, but I didn't like the car so ended up with 250/160 which roughly translates to the 0.92 ratio Lotus had.
You might like the equal F/R frequencies but I didn't so all I'd say is that if you're going to change the front, be prepared to change the rears as well.
Brian