Yeah, I remember when I fitted the S3 intercooler to mine and I was seeing 50+ intake temps sat in traffic, I thought WTF is this all about? What a waste of money
Then I tapped the throttle and it dropped to about 30 instantly
Even lower on the move. With that IC the temps were always around 10 above atmosphere in summer, and 5-7 over winter. Just have to ignore the low speed readings as it's false reporting
Julian is a legend! I think he's written a book! I remember when he first setup his business he would chat on the phone for ages, going into detail and explaining the fundamentals
He custom spec'd a set of Gaz Gold for my Corrado back in the day. It was for road use only, so he spec'd much softer springs than I would have chosen myself.....325lb front, 225lb rear, but man did it ride and handle well
Just feed him the axle weights and the car's intended purpose, and he comes up with the goods. Interestingly enough, the only reason the MK7 Clubsport broke the ring record (at the time) was because of it's softer 'ring mode' suspension setting. Interesting. Maybe stiff isn't always the way
Logically speaking, if the suspension is soft enough to absorb bumps at high speed but stiff enough to prop the car up, it deflects the body shell less, which improves stability and consistency. That is the problem with going too stiff, it can jog the car around too much, unsettling it mid corner....but it depends how bumpy the track is I suppose.
The Ohlins and Gaz Gold are the best coilovers I've ever owned, and both were on the softer side of the norm. Neither lasted long though unfortunately, but I think Gaz have sorted their quality issues now. Gaz are ex Leda, who were a top brand back in the day
When it boils down to it, damper quality is the key. If they are top notch, you can afford to back the spring rate off a bit. The temptation is to eradicate all body roll completely, but a bit of roll can be advantageous in some situations. It's all about slip angles and other complex stuff I can't get my head around
Anyway, I would 100% take advice from the ledge Julian
The deadsets are collars to take up the difference in the subframe holes being much bigger than the bolt diameter, which locks it into place and it cannot move. I tried the VAG fix with stiffer bolts and the toothed washers but the subframe still moved. With the collars, the steering feel and alignment were waaaaay more consistent in hard cornering. Without the collars, the movement was so bad, my steering wheel was a few degrees off centre after slinging it hard into a bend
And then do the same thing in the next corner, and it would move the opposite way! Consistency is important on hard track work.
Getting it close with string or camber gauges is fine to get you somewhere. 4 wheel alignments aren't cheap and annoying if you have to keep doing them with every suspension tweak!