Re: PSM vs PASM. Ok wrong acronym. I guess I'm just an air cooled guy in a water cooled world!
Re: Traction. None of this changes how a friction circle works. When you're steering and putting power into the same contact patch, lateral load limits will be less. Why? The Tire only has so much traction to give.
Example: Easy to rotate a RWD car while spinning the tires. The traction used for acceleration leaves nothing for rear lateral grip. Basic car control stuff.
Re: Polar moment of inertia, moment of inertia. Splitting hairs.
Re: Lying about BMW's emphasis on 50/50 weight distribution. If you're going to call somebody a liar, aircon, at least do a google search first (BMW + ad + 50/50). Otherwise, you come off looking like an idiot.
BMW is still using this line as the focal point of their advertising, which started in the 80s. How do I know this? Cause I was there, son. I could find a link for that too, but you'd only ignore it.
Re: Old 911s and narrow tires. They didn't weigh 3400-3500 lbs either, Irv.
A 70s 911S was about 2400 lbs. Those tires had about the same size contact patches as a new, heavier watercooled Porsche on wider tires. So this begs the question why newer Porsches have higher lateral grip than older ones. Lots of reasons, but tire compounding is a big part of it.
As you probably know, tire size doesn't equate to contact patch area... unless it's flat. The real issues are vehicle weight and inflation. Club racers and autocrossers fine tune their car's handling through inflation adjustments. Basic stuff, with one or two psi capable of making a bigger change in handling than 5-10 mm of cross ectional width.
Don't take my word for it. Read Carrol Smith's "Prepare to Win", Fred Puhn's "How to Make your Car Handle", Jay Lamm's "All Wheel Drive Handbook" or Skip Barber's "Going Faster!". I could name others on my bookshelf, but start with those. They're really good.
Re: FWD cars with yaw control. Yes, they will spin and in very dramatic fashion. Yaw control systems only work to a point. They do not and cannot overcome the laws of physics. Once the car starts to rota fast enough, yaw control can't stop it. If things worked as you suggested, we'd never see rice rockets slide sideways into telephone poles. Yet, it happens all the time.
It sounds like you've never been on a track, much less competed on one. Maybe you read other books. That's OK too. This stuff is not everyone's thing.