Thanks guys,
In essence then, stiffening or softening the ride (in addition to adjusting ride height) is affected by: , pre-load, spring length and spring rate.....?
If true then merely using a 300# coil is not enough information to obtain a disired result. Seems, first the ride height needs to be determined, then the length of spring needs to be determined and finally the rate, in that order.....?
Once the car's weight is on the springs, the springs should not be 'pre-loaded'. If the spring is pre-loaded at full droop, fine, but after the spring is compressed past that pre-load point, it won't have any effect on the car as long as that point is NOT within the compliance range of the suspension. Ride height and pre-load can be adjusted out with the proper length spring and threaded tube legth for coil-over set-ups, so these should not factor into the decision on what spring rate you'll use.
As Andy said, to do this accurately, you'll need to know the unsprung corner weights (because this is the weight that the spring is supporting), and then the movement ratio (ratio of spindle movement verses spring perch movement). A movement ratio (incorrect terminology, but I'm sticking with it) of, for example, .5 (the spring is
compressed 1/2" for every 1" that the wheel will moves) would require a spring 4 times stiffer to have the affect as the same spring with a 1.0 ratio (inversely proportional to the square of the ratio)
So in regards to the 2400 lb, and 47/53 distribution, lets assume 80 lbs of unsprung weight at each corner, and you've got a .7 movement ratio (wild guess here because I'm not overly familar with the GT suspension). Then using the above information, you'd be reasonably close to supporting 556 lbs (sorry for the lack of SI terms) at each of the rear points or corners. With a 1.0 movement ratio (which is impossible for the GT), a 275 lb spring would compress roughly 2 inches from full droop to static ride height (no pre-loading, and so-so for the track, but a little marginal for the street in my humble opinion). In reality though, the same "support" with a .7 movement ratio would require a 561 lb spring
275/(.7^2) If you wanted a little softer street ride with a 3" compression of the spring at static ride height (which is a lot in my eyes considering the car), then a 380 lb spring rate would be a better choice.
This will get you close to what you want without considering the below. I'm a little confused on the chart in the previous posting, but I believe it is for live axle suspensions which does not reflect acurately the independent suspension design of the GT, and thus indicates a fairly weak spring rate compared to the GT requirements. AGAIN, this is based on assumptions and guesses, but does illustrate what you need to know.
Something a lot of folks don't consider is the dampening. You'll need a good damper for this or higher, and you'll also want to consider the front an rear bars as well in you decision because they all work together. you'll also need to know what the stroke of the damper is in order include this in your consideration. You'll not want a really weak spring if you've got a really short damper stroke.