Your camber settings look about right but I always check these at the end of tinkering about with these type of settings. What I look for is similar amounts of difference in temperature between the front tyres and the rear tyres. On a circuit track the temperature on the outside wheel is hotter than the wheel on the inside. Then the inner wheel inside edge should be hotter than the outside edge by about 10-15 degrees. The outside wheel should have a hotter outer edge than the inside edge also by about 10-15 degrees. The difference in temperature of the front wheels should be about the same as should the difference between the rear wheels.
First off, for test tracks, I use Maple Valley Long, finding that there is a good variety of straights, elevation change, hair pins, sweepers, off cambers, and high speed breaking opportunities. Enough to strive for even as possible temps across all tires. This is where I tune for grip. After running about 3-4 warm up laps, I open the Telemetry. First order of business is to check tire pressure. I adjust to get the 32-33# range, then every tune I save has 32-33# all corners. Then I look for temps. I have made this a priority. I adjust the cambers to yield even, flat heat profile across all tires. I look for 3-5* on turns and straights. Some hairy turns increase the delta to up to 10*, but I look to minimize that if I can. Then I adjust the ARB to yield even temps from side to side. These are all of course variable depending on the left, right combinations on any specific track. But, when I am finished adjusting for pressure and heat, I get 32's all around and (+/-) 3-5* left-right. Now, depending on the weight distribution, there will be more or less front to back. When I am done, I have laid down as much rubber as possible. The even heat profile across the tires = more rubber to the tarmac= better traction. Then I tune for balance. That is where I get scary.
I would also try different engine upgrades to see if you can find the best upgrade to apply. I don't fully understand the engine upgrades but I play about with the parts and watch the clock when unsure. I know the cams mess with the rev range and for some tracks/cars this can produce good results. As I understand it the higher reving is good for high speed tracks or tracks where the car is using the top end of the engine for large proportions such as speedway or Maple Valley where there are not many low speed corners. What we are looking for in this challenge is good acceleration at low speed and top end is less significant.
I might be off the mark but torque not hp is important here and cams might not be the best upgrade to choose. I started out by avoiding cams for the above reason but pretty much any of the other engine upgrades are good for torque. From memory I ran low 60s at Tskuba full. Then I took those upgrades off added the cams and compared times to see the difference. It didn't feel as good to me and I think the time was about the same. I then tried a few of the turbos to see if those proved any good. When I added the cetrifugal supercharger my time came down to 59.5 and I was pretty consistently under or around the 60 mark. I didn't bother to mess with any of the other upgrades after this as I knew it was going to be about as good as I was going to get from this car.
I replaced the sport cams with race fuel and sport ignition. This changed the TQ from 233 to 250 (much improved) and HP from 270 to 269 (not significant). More importantly, the TQ came in at 2200 RPM instead of 2600, the HP at 5700 instead of 6400. And the red line dropped from 7000 to 6500. So I think I have taken care of the TQ issue. And, put the power in a range where the engine does not have to bust a gut. I have always found that adding TQ is superior to adding HP in most circumstances. I have found that the most TQ impact comes from Cams. If that is the last bit of PI I can add and stay in class, that's what I do. BUT, apparently, that is not always the case, not so simple it would seem. So moving on, I will pay more attention to the benefit that the Cam upgrade has, and compare it to other available modifications before I save the tune. Lesson learned.
Thanks, Silvo 1981, for you advice.