(I'm sure there are some professionals who know the best setup but as that's their bread & butter it's hardly fair to ask them to comment

that's a very important point. A cars passive suspension geometry is set up to provide the best handling in motion. vehicles with soft suspension will have different passive camber settings to those with hard. As the vehicle tilts during cornering the effective camber angle will differ because of the lean of the vehicle and also the compression of the suspension. Most systems - Macpherson struts for example - do not allow perfectly vertical compression of the uprights.I've always understood that a front anti-roll bar would generally increase understeer by putting more load on the front tyres, but if it controls the camber and keeps the tyres in better contact it could actually reduce understeer
Presumably you mean due to there being little 'bounce' in a soft system as opposed to a 'hard' system. BUT as we know, that principle is for an ideal system. If (as in the Minor's case) the system is sub-optimal then hardening the suspension can lead to the tyre surface being in contact with the road surface more uniformly due to less geometry change upon weight transfer. The ideal system of course would induce more negative camber on the side that needs it under cornering so that the % of tyre contact with the road remains as high as possible.Innovator wrote:It is a fact of physics that the softer the suspension the more the grip will be, all other things being equal.
Exactly. The old 'trade-off'. This is why the people that put huge tyres with low compliance on a car with hard suspension suffer the 'crossply effect' and end up skittering all over the place as the contact area starts to lift under hard cornering.On the other hand a very low suspension which is very stiff will slide a lot. The compromise (and this word comes up all the time with suspension design) is somewhere in between.
Indeed. There is also a lot to be said for driver skill too. A skilled driver will do far better in a poorer handling car than an unskilled driver in a well set-up car. Especially if there is a sharp breakaway limit which is quite common in well set-up cars. This often takes inexperienced drivers by surprise!What nobody can argue with is what each person prefers, that is a personal preference.
Unless of course you fit a bigger engine, then you find that it oversteers. The trick though is to balance them out.All my experience with standard Minors and modified Minor suspension show that when pushed hard a Minor will understeer. A front anti roll bar will make this worse.
Suspension is a complicated business.
My best guess is this:I have no idea why the Minor
defies the normal reaction in this way, perhaps someone could explain
''all things being equal" is the key in John's comments as far as I can see ;-)So basically you are saying that stiffening the suspension will cause it to handle worse than if it's left standard?
Well I have teles fitted at the rear using a similar method to that shown in the technical tips manual without the need for the floor mounted or wing mounted parts, admittedley they are still at an angle but they work fine for me as locally as we have a lot of mountainous sleeping policeman, and I have found it a great improvement over the standard levers at the rear mainly in the comfort department rather than the performance stakes and consider it a real benefit, if you want more info send me a PM as I think I still have some photo`s at home, if not I can soon take some more if interested.Would it be possible to fit upright dampers without the towers that go into the boot?