I want to go over a few things to make sure I understand them since the books are a little vague on the subject. This is based on a solid axle rearend set-up.You get your set-up designed and let's say that based off the roll-axis, you have neutral roll steer.1) Since the roll axis will probably change as the rear ride height chages, I take it that you have neutral roll steer at only this ride height?2) If the above answer is yes, then ideally you would want a set-up that would add roll understeer during compression? I was thinking that when you accelerated out of a corner, without 100% anti-squat, the rear suspension is going to compress a little. Since the vehicle is leaning, then the roll axis will come into play, correct?3) If both of those statements above are true, then lets say a set up that had some roll understeer at ride height, but moved to a neutral steer during compression, wouldn't be ideal? Would losing understeer be the same as gaining oversteer?
i don't know much about the subject, but i'd say that if you have adjustable rear links setup, you could adjust the rear roll steer at the track.for instance, if you are racing at a mostly left hand turn track, you'd want the roll steer setup so that toe of the axle would be done for left turns and sacrifice some on right turns.i think you'd have to keep the roll steer setup as neutral at ride hight.i believe it's ideal to have the suspension setup so that the roll steer is more independent from the body roll of the truck. it's better to have it designed into the suspension and try to keep from relaying on the roll of the vehicle to create it.you wanna see roll steer in action, check out nascar nowadays.(http://motorsport.com/photos/nascar-cup/2008/as/nascarcup-2008-as-as-0193.jpg) they toe the rear end to add "side-bite" nascar just recently limited the amount of toe to 1 deg. some teams were running over 2 deg, they were unable to pull onto nascar's inspection rigs and just about couldn't park into the garage stalls. lol