"Since this is a transient condition look at your shocks. I'd be thinking about bumping the rear shocks up a bit in their low velocity jounce section. "
Got a set coming in the morning with increased low speed D/F! One step ahead of you!
"The other thing to look at to reduce yaw delay is a constant contact jounce bumper (a foam cylinder over the shock rod) and reducing your road spring rate. This increases the effective roll rate while maintaining the same bounce rate."
Long Jounce bumpers have been tried! It definatly make the car more "solid", and I can lower the spring rates.... BUT Life is never simple! 2 Problems. Problem 1 is endurance... the jounce bumpers have shown to decrease in spring rate by almost half. So they "wear out" and then the vehicle starts handling badly and we have warrenty work that I am responsible for in the long run. Number 2 is body accuracy! Our vehicle height has a tolerance of about +/- 7mm. In actual production it never sees that much, but some preproduction runs on other cars off this platform have been as much as 5mm different. That doesn't seem like a lot, but this platform is very sensitive. So if the contact point of the Jounce bumper to the S/A changes from car to car....they all handle different, and I have to fix that.....more work for me! So I have almost given up on using long jounce bumpers, but it is still in the back of my head. But actually, YES it does decrease the yaw delay, but it doesn't fix the big problem of toe-out rear oversteer feeling.
I did make a little progress today by using stiffer bushing on the toe link, but the response is way to much, so I will try to decrease the stiffness of the trailing arm bushing to help the toe link and lower arm move together. Currently the lower arm seems to remain fixed, but the just the toe link moves vertically(knuckle rotating about the B-point of the lower arm). Hopefully the weaker/more compliant trailing arm bushing will help the lower arm and toe link move together in the longitudinal direction instead of forceing the toe link to move vertically. Hopefully it brings the response back down to a resonable level, and not to an unaacceptably low level.
BTW... you guys have been great! I don't have alot of help at my job, and I am the only one in the states doing my work for ALL our cars, so it is very nice to bounce ideas and questions off others with similar backgrounds. Sounds like a lot of work, but at least I have got to work on 3 totally different vehicle classifications in the past 3 years. I just hope my hard work pays off in the long run.