Its quite interesting looking at those pictures from a suspension point of view.
Three degs neg on the fronts (to try to stop the scrubbing) but it has worn the insides too! so too much camber!
Am I right in thinking its the softness of the suspension that is causing the tyres to roll as it goes into positive camber? (the tyres are at about 32-33 Psi in those pictures which is too much really)
Pictures are indeed fascinating. It's actually how vehicle dynamics started and how the first analysis were done before people knew what and why cars behave the way they do.
I think a massive amount of the cars on Cliosport would benefit from going back to basics and actually thinking about things rather than just essentially everyone copying Burpspeed because they have the quickest Clio. Though naturally it's therefore not a bad thing to copy!
33 PSI (2.1 bar ish) isn't a million miles off and would actually begin to offset the increased inside shoulder wear you'd associate with too much negative camber. In general what is actually happening is the geometry associated with a Clio means that the camber angle changes a lot in roll (dynamic camber angle) and so if you have a large roll angle (e.g. soft springs, soft roll bar, high lateral force from running a wide track or slicks etc.) you get very poor tyre performance as it's never being used at it's optimum angle (which is not dead upright as people think, it's actually around -0.5deg for something called "camber thrust" but there are entire books on this).
The excessive roll angle causes excessive dynamic camber change which causes the sidewalls to fall over themselves.
So you want to reduce roll angle. Without an adjustable FARB this means springs and dynamic camber is the reason stiff springs make such a difference to Clios. But
if you fit stiffer springs then it just means the spring deflects less and the tyre sidewall deflects more and so the sidewall falls over itself and the problem remains to some extent (the total force going through the tyre sidewall and spring remains constant no matter what spring rate you have - quite obvious when you think the weight of the car doesn't change!) Clearly this is bad for tyre life and actually extremely bad for grip because of the exact way tyres work (but again people have dedicated their entire lives to how tyres work) because they respond very poorly to large variations in the contact patch force (and clearly if the sidewall is folding over there is a lot of force!)
Do you have the RC correction kit? A well placed roll centre reduces roll angle and therefore improves dynamic camber angle. Frankly I don't think anyone has done the analysis to decide where a good RC height actually is, but no doubt putting it near to standard (what the RC kit tries to do) is better than nothing.
So clearly you need to strike a balance: a soft enough spring so that the spring is doing all the deflection and not the sidewall (to stop the sidewall falling over itself) but a
stiff enough spring to nail down the roll angle (to reduce dynamic camber change so that the sidewall doesn't fall over itself). Roll angle is determined only by springs/ARB (and the force causing it to roll obviously), the damping rate only changes the amount of time the car takes to reach it's maximum roll angle. For a rally car which doesn't really do long settled corners you might find with stiff damping you're rarely in a corner long enough to reach the maximum roll angle. So from this point of view - increasing the (low speed) bump damping may help, but nowhere near as much as springs/ARB/tyre pressures.
And this is where CS opinions are so, so useful. Because plenty of people will now comment who've been through 7 spring rates and found the ideal balance between limiting roll and limiting sidewall deflection. For a Clio on sticky tyres with decent quality dampers this seems to be around the 500lb mark as I'm sure MG Cup, Northloop, Chip et. al. have also found.
Does your Clio go on bumpy stuff with the same spring rates? What the Clio world could really do with (even more so for you rally folk) is a stiffer FARB. That way you can limit roll angle to improve dynamic camber AND run softer springs to improve the contact patch. But that's a bit of a project for someone. (You'd also have to do a new RARB to massively up the rear roll stiffness to keep the same handling balance)
Soz 4 long reply. I don't know, I just got the impression you just sound interested to learn "why" and not just "what can I buy becauseracecar"
TLDR: Others with 500lb ish springs will confirm, but generally you probably want to go stiffer as you can more in dynamic camber control than you loose through all the bad things associated with a car being too stiff.
Infact can you just correct me please - is this a rally car or I have made that idea up in my head lol? Does it ever see slippery surfaces? Because camber angles and spring rates are probably the last things to copy from people who run on a flat circuit!