OK so I thought through this in some detail and really considered the suspension geometry of the car and the opportunity costs of different tuning approaches. The
phrase that jumped out at me from Gavan Kershaw's comments in the TST Podcast regarding the difference between the suspensions was
"hub control". The Touring suspension has less of it. Or rather, it trades off hub control for ride comfort. How much? We don't know. But I've tried to make some guesses.
I'll walk you through my thought process. Here's the front suspension on the Emira, for reference:
View attachment 4210
It's a double wishbone car front and rear, with pretty close to equal-length wishbones. That's great in that it keeps camber perfectly controlled during vertical bump events, but a challenge in that it
experiences camber shift during cornering
whenever the body rolls, because whenever it tilts, the body pulls the lower control arm inward and pushes the upper control arm outward.
Like so:
View attachment 4208
So as body roll occurs during cornering events, it
loses camber on the outside wheel and
gains it on the inside wheel, which is the opposite of what you would want for grip. This can be masked or
counteracted somewhat by having sufficient
static camber (alignment), particularly in the rear, and also a significant amount of
caster (steering axis angle) which causes camber gain on the front axle as steering is increased. But ultimately, it's a compromise in both cases. You need to have enough combined camber compensation to keep the tire's contact patch close to level during maximum lateral G forces at both front and rear, and if one axle ends up more well-compensated than the other it changes the balance of handling (oversteer/understeer) at the limit. And
the more body roll you have, the
more extreme your camber compensation needs to be in order to maintain grip at the limit, while also balancing the compensations appropriately front/rear to retain neutral handling (or something near it).
So, the
compromise to be struck on this type of suspension is between A) more suspension travel (lower combined spring rate) which contributes to body roll... and B) less suspension travel (higher combined spring rate) which lowers body roll and prioritizes control over the hub angle and the tire's contact patch during high-G cornering events. By
combined spring rate, I mean the combination of the rate of the
primary springs and also the
anti-roll bar which is a modifier for spring rate during cornering. Comfort on normal road imperfections can be similar between the higher and lower rate setups if the damper is tuned well, but the
car equipped with higher primary spring rates will have less suspension travel to work with and therefore
won't cope as well with large impacts like potholes. Large bumps mid-corner will be more likely to induce traction loss in the stiffer car.
Higher spring rates effectively lower the roll moment, making the
camber loss significantly lower during cornering, so a car with stiffer suspension doesn't need (as) high static camber settings to achieve consistent control over the angle of the tire's contact patch. A car with the
softer "Touring" suspension would still not use extreme camber settings from the factory, because that's not a recipe for tire longevity, so it's to be expected that it
would roll more onto the outside edge of the tire during fast driving. The rest shouldn't change much... the steering feel should be largely similar, and the car should be absolutely just as rewarding to drive fast, but the handling limits will be a bit lower and the balance of handling will not be as strictly consistent.
So to sum up, my own best
guess based on all available info thus far...
- Touring will be more plush on the road, and will have lower handling limits but likely a little more "seat feel" as the body moves around more, and will chew up tires a little faster if you're driving aggressively on twisty roads or on track. This choice is an ideal compromise if your exploration of the dynamic limits will likely remain somewhere below 7/10ths. The lower absolute limits may also make the car more fun for the driver that experiments a bit further, because the handling limits are explorable at lower speeds and will likely be more progressive when encountered.
- Sport will have slightly firmer ride with higher absolute handling limits, with more precise and consistent handling at the limit of lateral grip, and will likely preserve the tires a little better if your pattern of use is very dynamic. Avoid potholes. A better choice if your exploration of the dynamic limits will extend to 9/10ths, whether on track or on mountain roads. Handling limits when reached may be more sudden, since the tire is being worked more comprehensively.
- Still unknown: whether the 80 variations of the Goodyear tire were iterated to address the particulars of the Touring suspension (which will tend to load the edge), or the Sport suspension (which won't as much), or to compromise for both.
If you'd like to play directly with the effect that body roll has on this geometry, there's a live demo applet here that lets you shift the body of a double wishbone car and see the effect on camber angle. I've mocked up some wild ass guesses at the geometry of an Emira, front and rear. At some point I'd like to get the exact geometry measurements of an Emira and build a proper suspension model on there to show it exactly, but for now this super rough, very incorrect version will have to do. It does show the effect of body roll on camber though.
I hope all this helps someone else think through it. Recognizing that there's an inherent opportunity cost tied specifically to body roll for double wishbone cars has helped me place it appropriately in the hierarchy of compromises.
Thanks!
Jason Porter