Yes, guess I do know.
I don't which kind of car your other one is (I guess rwd?).
It depends a bit on ackermann geometry (like road cars) or not (like true race cars).
But generally toe in on front improves turn in.
Why?
The reason is dynamic weight distribution.
When cornering weight moves to the outer wheels.
Imagine first you'd have toe out on front:
When you turn your steering wheel a bit the inner wheel turns in first, the outer
wheel is just directed out or straight. This causes in the moment when the weight
goes to the outer wheel the 'turn in' is slowed. If you turn the steering wheel even
more the cars turns in.
Now with toe in on front:
When you start turning the steering wheel the weight goes to the outer wheel
which is already slightly 'turned in' and so this helps for quick turn in. This gives
usually a much better steering feel.
You got it?
Toe out on front has a stabilizing character. That's why bumping in causes the
Golf front axle to toe out esp. when braking hard.
One more reason for even more toe in on front:
For low tyre wear the front steering kinematic needs to be according to Ackermann.
This means both wheels follow the same center poit with their own radius.
That's good for road cars used in narrow cities.
Unfortunately driving fast through corners requires more steering angle on the
wheel that has more weight. This is the outer wheel!
That's why true race cars' steering systems are desgned 'anti-Ackermann', so their
outer wheel turns more than the inner wheel.
Retrofitting this on a street car isn't easily possible. But more toe in helps coming
closer to this. So more grip and less understeer as well.
Porsches have a neutral steering. No Ackermann, no anti-Ackermann.
Last not least a third reason:
It is common knowledge that if you increase (negative) camber you have to increase
toe in as well to provide even tyre wear.
edit:Even more, the VAG PQ35/36 platform front suspension goes to massive toe out
when bumping in (you can see it when lowering your car before alignment).
So the outer wheel will do so when turning. The softer the bushes the more.
This helps to stabilize the car when an unskilled driver needs to brake and/or
needs to turn in an emergency situation cos this causes understeer and slowes
the steering. On track or for fast raod applications we don't want this behaviour
or at least less of it. We want less understeer.
http://tesis-dynaware.com/fileadmin/Downloads/Referenzen/VW_ATZ_Messdatenbasierte_Fahrdynamiksimulation.pdf