I have been reading a lot from Bob Bolles publications and he mentions a lot about matching front and rear roll angles, not the roll centers themselves front and rear but the actual chassis roll together so the chassis wants to roll the same going through the corners. I may have missed this, but I have looked some thoroughly through this thread and haven't found this concept discussed much on here and was curious if that theory holds true. And if so, how can I find out how much the front and rear is rolling on my chassis as I know shock travel indicators aren't the most accurate and I def. don't have the money for a data acquisition system, if I have missed it, my mistake I honestly tried looking!
Also, in a prior post it was mentioned that for an asphalt car it is best to start at 52% Rear percentage. The car I have now came with a 17 gal. fuel tank. We run 40 lap - 50 lap races, so I was thinking if it was better to maybe put an 8 gal. fuel cell in that I have already have and take that 55lbs difference and put it lower onto the frame rail just behind the rear axle so I can maintain the higher rear percentage but have it lower in the car. Would this sound like a good idea if I can keep 52% rear? Or should I measure out the polar moment that RM mentioned and place the extra weight there, but lose the 52% Rear? Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thank you.