I'm curious as to exactly what the shock settings and tire pressures are for those owners who are experiencing difficulty getting their 01-02 ACR handling the way they would like it.
On my 01 ACR I am able to make the ride horrific or wonderful by leaving my rebound on very stiff settings and simply adjusting the compression up or down. I run with 29 PSI in all four tires.
With rebound set somewhere between 1 and 5 clicks off of full hard and the compression set on full soft at all four tires, my ACR handles very close to my 02 BMW M3, even on bumpy roads. I haven't torture tested my car nor do I ever intend to because I stay off of those kinds of roads, regardless of which car I drive. Try these settings for the street and let me know how you like them.
If you want your car to feel more like a racecar, stiffen up the compression settings 2 or 3 clicks at a time until you don't like the ride anymore. The car will respond to your inputs much faster but will be less forgiving if you screw up. You will feel an enormous difference using this exercise. It will make you respect the tunability of your shocks. I am amazed at how wide a range of dampening the Dynamic shocks offer on my car. They provide way more to the handling package than simply "fine-tuning". With these shocks, you can get glad in the same pants you get sad.
BTW the top 3 Viper Racing League drivers in the 2002 final points standings are running spring rates in both the front and rear that are significantly higher than 1100 LBS. Granted, they have a much stiffer chassis because of their roll cages and they have serious downforce produced by front splitters and rear wings.
A short story, then I need to go. In my VRL GT-1 Viper, I was always faster and much more comfortable with softer springs ( in the 500-900 LB range). I could drive the car more agressively with confidence and maintain control of the car, even if the rear end got tail happy in a corner. Over the last 2 years, many of the racers that I used to consistently thrash started beating me consistently. The fastest guys kept going stiffer and stiffer on spring rates, shock valving, sway bars, etc. I figured I better try what was working for them. I tried similar setups using spring rates subtantially higher than 1100 in both front and rear. I found the car to be well-balanced but very unforgiving if the car ever got loose in the rear. The last time I ever drove my race Viper (July 2002), I had a serious crash during testing at VIR. In the exit of a medium speed corner, the rear end snapped around on me so quickly that I couldn't correct it. In 18,000 miles of wheel to wheel racing, this was the first time I had ever made contact with anything in my Viper. The point is, different strokes for different folks. I've learned to set up the car to make myself comfortable and not worry about what the other guys are doing.
Finally, even if I tried to sabotage their setup, Bob Woodhouse and Paul Mumford would still be fast, especially driving *****'s car.