If I were designing a new race chassis, or had bought one and was about to do a race season... and I had the funding to do either K&C testing or 7-Post testing, I'd probably take K&C. When it comes to chassis setup, steady state comes before transient and dynamic.
For me, as a vehicle dynamics engineer, K&C data tells you a wealth about the cars and is pretty straightforward to analyze. 7-Post data, not so much.
If on a 7-post I see that I've reduced my RMS tire load variation by say 200 lbf... what does that tell me? Without a way to correlate high frequency tire load input to pure mechanical grip (good luck w/ that) .. you don't know if that's significant or meaningless. You can make the argument that any reduction is "good" .. but engineering and test tuning does come down to significance levels.
Or if I see I've reduced my peak to peak front ride height range from X to Y.. what does that tell me without an aero map? What if I'm racing some stock sedan which is relatively aero insensitive to begin with?
K&C data on the other hand...
I can map out roll stiffness distribution with any combination of springs, bars, and tire pressures I have available. When you get to the track and need to tune, you know exactly what each tuning tool is going to do and to what extent. If you don't know that.. you're don't know --- going into a test session. Car comes in.. driver is complaining of understeer, and you only have 30 minutes left in the session. How much does it need to change? Are the bars going to even do anything? Can it be done purely with inflation? When time is precious you don't want to be guessing.
I can measure my real kinematic rates and be able to determine what my mid-corner tire loads, cambers, and steer angles are. If you don't even know these, you can be throwing heaps of grip out the window. With even the most basic of tire data it's real easy to show how much grip you're gaining or losing.
If I know a degree of camber compliance is killing me (which it would), it's also pretty straightforward to sort out how much of that is coming from one wheel versus another.. bearing compliance.. suspension mounts.. you name it.
Plus you can measure "real" roll center heights (force based) through any range of ride height, roll, pitch, etc... suspension friction (grip killer), any number of things.
You're not going to get any of those things off a standard 7-post, and there's a good chance you're going to be getting a realistic answer through kinematic software either.
In the grand scheme of things if I were preparing for a race season, the order of data I'd want would be...
- Force & moment
- K&C
- Aero map (particularly open wheel)
- 7-post
But that's just me.
Grip is a four letter word. All opinions are my own and not those of current or previous employers.