OK: I've tried to write this three times now, and failed miserably. v4 follows:
In a bounce or pitch event you can see where the lateral location of the roll centre is. Essentially it is the single point at which all the loads from the axles suspension can be reacted by a pure force, rather than a force and moment (thinking in front view only). On the two front and two rear suspensions that I've checked the lateral motion of this point during a +/- 100 mm bounce test was less than 6 mm for three of them, and one of them had a spike to 50 mm, in a ride height change of 10mm, that I don't understand, but was probably due to a jounce bumper engaging.
Its location laterally is controlled by different kinematics side to side, due to non-square arms etc, and by different compliances, such as jounce bumpers.
This point still exists during a roll type event, but its location will also be affected by the ratio of sta bar torsional stiffness to roadspring torsional stiffness. I don't have an easy way way of working the effect of all these things out on the instantaneous roll centre.
The practical effect of it moving about is that the body roll angle vs latacc line will have a curve in it, or if you prefer the wheel load will not vary linearly with lat acc. This is a bad thing for the driver as it reduces the linearity of the vehicle.
Well, (a) is that right and (b) does that help? I've looked in Gillespie and he says nothing. The rest of the library is out at the proving ground where it will be more use!
Cheers
Greg Locock