i have done 10 years of karting so i know how to drive i think
. i was thinking a set of
bilsteins then.
if you have done 10 years of karting and no car circuit work you will have a problem your not maybe aware of.
it will also make bodyroll worse.
Karting tends to draw track drivers into taking way too much cornerspeed in ,if you have decent turn in then it will give alot,of bodyroll due to increased weight transfer.
Bodyroll needs 3 things looking into
arb stiffness
spring rates
sidewall stiffness of the tyre.
you need to find a balance between spring/arb stiffness and tyre grip at both turn in and mid corner .
dont forget the only suspention in a kart chassis is chassis and axle flex , these are massively stiff compared to roadcar springs and have huge controllable effect s they wind up and release.
karting is affected massively by corner release as there is no weight trnsfer in the sme way you have in a car as you have little to no bodyroll ,huge grip levels and thus carry huge realtive corner speeds .
karters tend to like the following in their car setups as a result
strong front end
happy with loose rear but not too much
flat cornering with little bodyroll.
hope that helps as the transition between the 2 disaplines is easier when you get to grips with the dynamics in your head