On other threads I've mentioned that I'm not satisfied with the handling of my car. This will be an ongoing (until I'm either satisfied or I give up) thread of my attempts to make it handle the way I think it should.
Mainly, my complaints have been that it feels like will go into severe oversteer going into a turn at speed, fast highway driving (>60mph) requires intense concentration partially because minute steering inputs seem to generate outsized results and also because the car feels a little twitchy.
Here's a bit of what I'm working with. It probably isn't exactly what you have but it might be close enough for you to gain from my experience or I might gain from yours.
What follows is my "starting point." I have a TCS, Richard's twin link rear suspension. Richard's upper front A-arms adjustable for camber. I have SPAX adjustable shocks. SPAX is not sure how many adjustment clicks mine have because they changed the design years ago but it is expected my shocks have 14 clicks.
Tires: Front: 195/50-15, Rear: 205/50-15
Pressure: Front: 15 - 18 psi, Rear: 24 - 26 psi (Richard's suggestion)
Springs: Front: 250#, Rear: 130# (also Richard's suggestion)
Shocks: Front: 3 clicks, Rear: 3 clicks
Alignment: (D = driver's side, P = passenger side)
Front toe: .20' degrees
Front camber: D: -3/8°, P: -1/4°
Front caster: D: +2 1/2°, P: +1 7/8°
Rear toe: .20' degrees
Rear camber: D: -1/2°, P: -1/2°
In general, the idea was to have as little rear toe-in as I felt comfortable with to hopefully give my rear tires a few more miles. I also thought that with wide tires, camber maybe should be on the bottom side of the spec.
This is not the beginning of my attempts but this seems like a good time to start. I've decided to put it on a rack to get a good baseline. Also, the shop owner, Gerry, suggested he had some insights into suspension tuning and I was interested in what he had to say. I can also compare what my alignment gear reads and what the big rack reads. To that end, I brought my car to him this morning.
The first thing Gerry told me is that my tire pressure was too low. I have to say that I was a bit surprised by the pressures Richard told me but I figured he knew a lot more about Europas and how to set them up than I. Gerry inflated the tires to 30 psi and that I might want to go to 35 psi in the rear. The next thing he thought was that my camber should be about -1° all around.
The result of Gerry's alignment was:
Front toe: .32' degrees
Front camber: D: -0.9°, P: -0.6°
Front caster: D: 2 .7°, P: 1.5°
Rear toe: .51' degrees
Rear camber: D: -1.0°, P: -0.9°
None of that is particularly noteworthy. Everything is pretty much within specs except for the passenger side front caster. I'm going to try adding a couple of washers to see if I can bring that up. I doubt it will make that much difference though. When Gerry was adjusting the camber on the driver's side front, the passenger front camber was -1.0° so that changed "on it's own". When I got home and checked on my camber gauge, I got about -0.6°. I will put in a little more negative camber on the passenger side. One thing I note is the rear toe equates to 0.20" which is within specs but on the high side (1/8" to 1/4"). I may try reducing that to aid tire wear.
So what was the result? It was a significant improvement. It's not near to where I want it but it is definitely in the correct direction. Going into a turn, the backend still feels loose but the overall stability is improved. Going near 80 mph did not require nearly the concentration that it used to. The steering was still lighter than I would prefer and I expect the rear toe was probably the biggest contributor to the highway stability and I think the higher tire pressures gave an improvement across the board.
Before I try any alignment changes, I will see if adding 5 psi to the rear tires helps the oversteer situation, then I'll try stiffening up the front shocks a click or two. I think the lightness of the steering on the highway could be adressed by taking a thin shim from under the cap nut on the pinion housing.
Stay tuned...