Front alignment settings for the FWD LC / LFR chassis are somehow like:
Toe: ideal 0 degrees.
Camber: around -0.5 degrees.
Caster: in the +7.17 to +8.17 degrees range, ideal around +7.35 degrees.
LCR chassis has deeper positive caster, in the +8.4 degrees range, which translates into better stability and better steering feedback.
Right now, due to FSD dampers, aluminium wheel spacers and shorter Bonrath top mounts they are like this:
Toe: 0 degrees.
Camber: -1.13 degrees left to -1.03 degrees right
Caster: +7.07 degrees left, +7.00 degrees right.
(Old mounts had from the start a deeper positive caster on the right wheel, due to different wearing out during their life.)
As the top mounts settle and squish themselves into the strut towers, it is expectable for both caster and camber angles to increase by slanting the strut backwards and inwards.
How much positive caster should be in a Leon Mk 1 chassis and how much does the caster angle influence stability? By now, all mods performed throughout the last 6 years seem to have increased negative camber only.
Caster can be adjusted, by slipping washers or shims over the long bolt that holds the LCA to the subframe, behind or in front of the cylindrical front LCA bushing, and therefore moving the LCA ~1mm forwards or backwards.
Later Edit:
+ The deeper negative camber helps stability - with summer tyres on winter dry tarmac around 0°C it clings to the road like glued.
+ There is no understeer, full stop.
+ There is no hopping when running over speed bumps.
- It does not drop significantly compared to previous OEM mount. 2-3mm, maybe 5mm at best.
- It tramlines. The smallest ripples in the tarmac influence the steering. However, if the road is perfectly smooth, stability is awesome.
~Nautilus