Here is a chart that includes the roll center of a stock TB suspension setup at a base 1" lower using a stock A-Body spindle and then compared to an F-Body spindle.
Full post here -
DOES THE HDK SUSPENSION K-MEMBER HANDLE BETTER THAN A T-BAR SUSPENSION? and here -
12:05 Garage- ’70 Duster build
Far as I know, no one has done the stock suspension in a suspension analyzer. I had planned to, but I was down with an injury last spring at that point and as I got better, I never got it done.
Joe did his HDK setup after swapping in 2" longer UBJ's and his roll center was at about 2.4".
Full post here -
12:05 Garage- ’70 Duster build
I asked him were it was with the originally supplied UBJ and he said he made some estimates and it was underground.
This is why I asked the OP about the short MII spindle. If the LCA is flat and the UCA is slopes down from the frame rail to the UBJ, the roll center is going to be underground and "less" than optimal. Now, the OP's kit could have raised the LCA mount point to get the UCA sloping the other way, which might be why it needed such a long spacer to correct his bump steer. But doing that makes for even less travel on the shock, which can already be pretty limited. The HDK kit has the upper shock mount pretty high to avoid that situation. Joe used longer UBJs to help with the UCA angle. Personally, I think a taller upright is the better answer.
Here is a visual to help with why (generally speaking) an UCA sloping down is bad:
Here are Joe's camber gains before the longer UBJ so you can compare to the above chart:
And after the 2" longer UBJ:
After the longer UBJ, looks like Joe is getting more camber gain than the F-Body spindle as he compresses the suspension. At the same time, roll center is still lower than the F-Body spindle and body roll will reduce camber on the outside tire. So then stiffer springs/shocks and/or a bigger swaybar are potential fixes.
The other thing is, I'm not sure where a 1" lower ride height puts the stock LCA. If it is still sloping down from the center of the car to the LBJ, then lowering the TB car even further will make the numbers in the chart even better.
Based on that data (there's that word again), I feel pretty comfortable saying that any COC kit that puts the LCA pivot in close to the factory location will never have improved geometry even with a 2" longer UBJ. Moving the LCA pivot up into the car would help or even fix that, at the expense of shock travel and bump steer correction spacers.
Just my opinion, but I think it is pointless to compare a COC to a stock suspension. I don't see any useful purpose behind the work.
So, I would propose that the TB suspension be set up with what is (I think) generally the target ride height and alignment for a handling build. So, lowered until the LCA is about horizontal and alignment numbers in the range of +3 to +6 degrees of caster and -1 degree of camber. The caster range allows for potentially just offset UCA bushings or the adjustable ones
@BergmanAutoCraft sells. I vote adjustable myself.
Then compare this to an out of the box setup from the suppliers. Not an optimized one like Joe runs, because most of the buyers don't have the drive Joe does and because most of the suppliers are touting "improved geometry" so the kit should stand on it's own.
Doing this back to back on the same car or at least in the same shop, with the same wheels would remove the potential for doubt to creep in. At the same time, I don't think we are talking about comparing 4 digit numbers either so close enough works (in my opinion).