1a) The outer wheel, in a corner, experiences a large inward drag at the contact pitch. This tends to rotate the inside lip of the CP upwards and inwards. Static camber gives you some 'presentation' of the CP to account for this.
1b) As the vehicle rolls it generates negative camber on the outer wheel. In practice you can't include enough camber gain, especially on rear wheels, partly because this is closely linked to RCH. So you dial in some static camber to help compensate for lack of camber gain.
2)How?
Cos we're clever.
Cheers
Greg Locock
Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips.