iOnic wrote:Drive a Gen1 and a Gen2+ and see which you prefer first. Some people (me included) feel that the Gen1 has a more "raw" feel and is less forgiving to inexperienced drivers.
Examine the
rear suspension changes and you'll see that there is no real difference in the suspension geometry in 99% of the situations. The main change was to remove the tendency of the rear wheels to go toe out when they were at extreme movements, usually on off camber bumpy surfaces.
Having driven quite a few of both varieties, and some that have been converted, I think it's a myth that there is any difference in feel between Series 1 & Series 2
rear suspension in most situations. There's more difference to be felt in changed alignment settings on the same model than there is between different models with the same settings.
The major change, and it's one that most people seem to gloss over, is the removal of the adjustable caster at the front that really took away the ability to tune the suspension, and did affect the feel of the suspension.
There is no such thing as "snap oversteer" so you can remove that one from your vocabulary quickly

There is, it's just that you haven't experienced it yet. As noted above the tenedency for the rear wheels to go toe out can cause the snap oversteer to occur, but in saying that I've also experienced snap oversteer on Series 2 suspension. Generally speaking this situation occurs when the rear wheels become unloaded when you already traction limited at the rear. In a lot of cases it's due backing off, either due to driver error or the situation requiring it, sometimes it's due to the change on camber of the road surface, which is what happened the time I experienced it in the Series 2. General rule is not to back off if you can avoid doing so.
As for whether it's worth swapping in the later suspension - I'd say no, learn to drive what you have and you'll find it more fulfilling than swapping in the "MR2 for dummies" suspension setup.
Firstly I'd say the spirited driving in MR2s is not for dummies, secondly if only the rear suspension is changed then I doubt that more than 1% of drivers would be able to detect that change. It's the old placebo effect. If I gave you two cars to drive, one with the changes and one without and told you the opposite of what they were, you'd be convinced that the one I told you had the changes somehow felt less precise, it's just human nature to prejudge
Gen1 has more options for adjustment in terms of wheel alignment as well.
Only at the front, and most people, if they have any sense, only swap the rear.