I too can understand where JT is coming from. I am certainly not happy about attempting to set up a car without some (previous) track testing, for various reasons. I would, however, question his comment:
Jersey Tom wrote:...or if you just throw a car at a rig I'm sure you'll see that just dropping spring rate gives you mechanical grip (no brainer!)...
That dependents very much on the starting point. It is not uncommon to find that a track based set-up is too stiff for good mechanical grip. In that case his statement would be correct. On the other hand, I regularly encounter set-ups on a non-aero car that, for various reasons, are too softly sprung. For that reason I don't agree that the statement is a "no-brainer"
Jersey Tom wrote:... in my mind you have to get your steady-state or flat road handling parameters nailed down first or you will be junk... and then good mechanical grip tuning is the icing on the cake that differentiates the best performers.
I like the logic, I would only add that you might be surprised how many discussions I have had with professional engineers (from F1 down) about the wheel rates of their springs and bars. The logic surely falls down without accurate estimates of those.
You might agree that "optimizing" damper settings for a spring and tyre selection is not completely straightforward
Jersey Tom wrote:Or.. you go to F1 where your aero department gains probably blow away anything you can do mechanically!
Without question, aero dominates F1 performance. Arguably, however, is it not the only thing that affects performance - I would guess that Jenson Button might agree (you might be able to suggest other examples).