Spoke go the Reiger and Ohlins about this when I got the suspension for the rallycars and they advised its not the way to go. If you look at manufacturers proper developed competition cars they haven't gone that route. Renault for example on the cup racers even the current one and all the rally clios inc S1600 don't share that view with over still rear. Alls I know is that it works and is proven. My track car was quicker than chase racing car and could carry as much corner speed for example.
Good bunch of questions, but I do believe there are answers to each that fit with the overall picture. I wrote a massive reply and decided no-one would care so wrote a short version:
* Rally cars are entirely different. On a circuit absorbing bumps is one of the lowest priorities hence you can get away with overly stiff springs. On a rally car absorbing bumps is one of the highest priorities.
* S1600 and cup racer are both customer cars. They genuinely are not designed to be as fast as possible. They're designed to be easy and predictable to drive so that private teams wlll buy lots of them. They're also better developed and are full of better-ways-to-go-fast-than-overly-stiff-springs (I mean come on, the S1600... it's really not very similar to my 182 at all in terms of size weight track width weight distribution suspension geometry etc.). Also regarding the S1600, I've no idea how much they cost but I bet you could buy at least one 172 track car for the price of a set of S1600 dampers.
* Soft springs ARE better for tyre grip (an alarmingly unknown fact) and Ohlins, RS and other racing car designers know this.
* There are much better ways to maintain a good camber angle during corners than rock hard springs but people who build clio track cars either don't know this, don't have the money or don't have the will.
* For a cheap simple track Clio it's more important to manage the camber angle in corners. So rock hard suspension to keep a good camber angle outweighs the grip benefit of softer springs when you build the car cheaply and easily.
As for your track car being faster than the chase racing car... I believe you (I've watched one of their onboards with you infront I believe) but given that there are 4000 differences between each car on that specific day (however similar they may look) you can't attribute that to one of those differences.
Bozo, this "ride frequency" thing I was on about explains Tony's 400 vs 450 comment quite well IMO.
Imagine a really hard spring on a clio. Now put the same spring on a bus. The same spring rate now feels really soft. Hence spring rate isn't actually a very good measure of how hard a SUSPENSION is. It's fine for measuring how hard a SPRING is though. So "ride frequency" is used to describe how "hard" the whole suspension feels because it takes into account mass, different suspension geometries etc. so it's great for comparing between cars. Remember Tony saying that 400lb vs 450lb wouldn't be a big difference even though it's nearly 15%? It's because of this ride frequency thing. I don't know if this will mean anything to you, but in the equation for ride frequency you "square root" the spring stiffness. This means that the impact of the change is "reduced."
e.g. square root of 16 is 4.
Square root of 4 (which is 4 times smaller than 16) is only 2 (which is only half as small)
That is why what sounds like a decent change in spring rate only makes a relatively small difference to how hard the suspension FEELS. (It's not quite as simple as just square rooting the spring stiffness, there's other stuff in the equation too, but the square root bit is the bit that explains why 450 vs 400 is only a small difference even though the number sounds quite big)
A consequence of this whole square root thing is that a Clio on a 400lb spring
does not "feel" exactly twice as stiff as a Clio on a 200lb spring! The other great thing about using "ride frequency" is that a ride frequency of 2
does feel exactly twice as stiff as a ride frequency of 1.