wkalman - 2008-06-16 5:37 PM
It is my opinion that reducing traction on either end of the car is a Bad Idea unless you are absolutely out of other things to do or up against the limits of the rules - or you're desperate to try anything just in case it works.
Typically, the hot setup for FWD is to add rear roll stiffness but I believe that a given chassis has an optimal F:R roll resistance **ratio** and anything outside that optimum is "less" overall. Once you find this optimal ratio, you can raise or lower the total stiffness, adjusting shock rates as appropriate and make small adjustments to things like camber, tire pressures, and toe. Note this is Total Roll Resistance, springs and bars included (and shocks to a lesser degree and then mostly in transistions).
A case in point was my STS Escort GT. I was doing very well with 250F/200R springs but then decided to take it up a notch. Along with some GC AD struts valved for the application, I went 500/500 - a 1:1 ratio compared to the 1.25:1 ratio I had before. The results with this new, more-rear-biased springing? Push! The reason was that I'd gone outside the optimal F:R ratio for the chassis. I was lifting the inside rear (remember, it's stiffer vs. the front now) moving the rear roll center to the contact patch of the outside rear (as Nate alluded to), which diagonally loaded the outside front = push. Putting 600# springs on the front solved the problem by putting my ratio at 1.2:1, much closer to the 1.25:1 that worked so well before.
That was on struts where less body roll always results in less camber loss. On a double-wishbone suspension like yours, you may find that a higher or lower **total** roll resistance puts you in the sweet spot of your car's geometry or at least in a place where you balance the suckage front to rear.
Ultimately, unless you go to a F/R staggered tire setup, FWD is going to push in a steady state corner. Outside of a staggered setup, the trick is to get a car that allows you to trailbrake/lift throttle steer it into corners - **predictably**.
And extreme example is our HS '07 Civic - We're leaning WAY over into the outside front while trailbraking into a turn (as much as the stock ABS will allow) and really extending the inside rear suspension. We're hoping to fix it with a bigger front bar - straighten up the car and reduce the *diagonal* loading. Conventional wisdom says that we need more rear stiffness to get the car to rotate but that would be completely the wrong direction for us. Our F:R ratio is not nearly optimized from the factory.