Ess Three
Thanks for the info.
Looks like the differance between the 205 50 15 and 215 40 16 diameters isn't that great but the 195 45 15 diameter will give a similar effect to changing the final drive.
You could be right...
I seem to recall 195/50/15 and 215/40/16 are both similar, and both lower than 205/50/15.
If I am right with changing the final drive you will get faster acceleration but lower top speed in each gear. I need to work out if changing up to 5th on some tracks will be beneficial, or whether slightly slower acceleration but staying in 4th will be better.
Spot on.
Lower speed in each gear, usually offset by higher rev limit from tuning (cam and mapping etc).
Technically, a lower top speed too...although lack of power and aerodynamics will stop play long before you hit the rev limiter in top on a Mk3 anyway, so hardly an issue.
I can pull 6800-7000 in top in my ABF with 3.94. Rev limit is 7300. That's it...too much drag for any more
With a 4.2 I'd hit the limiter in top.
Obviously on slower tracks it will be of benefit, but at Castle Combe and Goodwood we are just starting to hit the limiter at the fastest point before braking. Not sure going into 5th will be of real benefit.
Possibly not...you may have to hold on the soft limiter...saves changing up and straight back down again.
The lower FD brings the Mk3 alive.
Sounds like you are getting there with the ITB project. Lets hope you get to break your magical 200 bhp barrier and get that exhaust cam working that has been giving you grief.
I'm confident...

As far as the MS system goes do you think its of benefit over the normal ecu system on a fairly standard tuned car or only worthwhile to make use of major tuning upgrades?
MS doesn't have the same perfect idle control as Digi 3.2, that's for sure.
Everywhere else, you'd not know it wasn't Digi 3.2.
The main advantage, is that you have total control over the timing and fuelling. So each time you tweak something, it saves you £350 in getting a bespoke ABF re-map done...just head to the dyno for an hour with your laptop.
Great for changing cams, filters, head, TB etc...
Mine was properly plug and play into an ABF - uses all the standard sensors, and fires standard injectors, so once installed you'd not know it was there...except for the less than perfect idle mapping as I never spent enough hours refining that...oh, and it has launch control too!
Does a standard ABF need standalone management?
No.
Will you get any gains over a re-mapped Digi 3.2 ECU?
No.
Will it let you play to your hearts content and map for all modifications...hell yeah!
It takes some time to learn the software...but once there you can on the fly map, using the standard narrow band lambda and 'Megatune' application to get it close...then just do the on-load mapping on the dyno. All for less than a generic re-map.
And it's there for any other mods you care to add.