Certified, I am certainly not the expert and I have a lot of work to do on my car with regards to springs, shocks and alignment but here's what I think I know about the situation with springs:
First, I would not increase the front spring rate without a similar increase in the rear (but not increasing the rear might be an interesting experiment. see below).
If I wanted the simplest route to a lower front end, I think I would go with 8" springs closer to the original rate, but maybe up to the 140# you got from Dave Bean. This may work but then you'll have less pre-load in your springs and that may require other changes.
Increasing the spring rates to my 250#/140# and leaving the shocks soft has no effect on driving around town, say up to 60 mph. By that I mean, the ride is not harsh nor bouncy. After 60 mph, it gets nervous.
From what I've read from others, that is cured by increasing the stiffness of the shocks and likely more stiffness in the front than the rear and it may require different shock settings for the highway and city driving where you're more likely to find bumps. I think Lou might have more experience in that area.
It may be that the best situation is marginally increase the spring rates (a la Dave Bean and maybe others) rather than double them like I have on mine.
That's probably all I know, which obviously is not much. I hope it helps, but I won't be offended if it doesn't!
Edit:
I forgot to get to the "see below" part! What I've found on my car is that the rear feels like it wants to swap ends going into a turn especially. From what I've read, stiffer front shocks will help cure this. Softer springs on the rear might as well but I'm not sure about changing the balance of spring rates. A stiffer front bar should also help but that's a bit beyond the scope of this discussion. At the same time, I've heard of people who have added a rear bar (that should increase over steer) and claimed it improved the handling. In fact, Addco sells a kit for one.
I THINK that what ever spring rate changes you do, it might be best to keep the same relative increase front and rear and tune with shock settings. At least, that's the tact I'm planning.