So, @RonP, in practical terms just take a look at the side profile of your car and what do you see? A wing - and a wing creates lift. The car is already light sitting still and becomes more so as the forward speed increases.
Couple that with a swing-arm rear suspension (which you have) and a couple of things happen that you must watch out for:
1. The car can get light and "floaty" at higher speeds and may tend to wander around in the lane and/or follow bumps and uneven-ness in the pavement (you may have noticed this in your jaunt). THAT can become disconcerting for some drivers and can happen at speeds as low as 35-40mph. The best way to improve that is to add caster shims to the bottom front torsion bar to improve front suspension geometry, and maybe increase the front toe-in a tiny bit (those shims are available from CB Performance and CIP1, among others). Properly set up, a VW beam front end can be stable up to 90 or so. It improves handling in the 35 - 80 range, too. Do a search on here for caster shims and read up on them. They're cheap and most of us use them and many of us keep up with interstate traffic which is usually running 75 - 80mph here in New England.
2. With a swing-arm rear suspension, as the car lifts and gets lighter, the rear wheels travel up and down in an arc, not straight, so if you were to jack the rear wheels off of the ground they tuck in under the car. Secondly, as you take faster and faster corners, centrifugal force pushes the inside corner side of the car up. When that happens, the wheels tuck under the body and, because of the centrifugal force, the wheel tucking and movement of the car, the outside corner rear wheel can actually ride up on the sidewall of the tire (not good) and in extreme cases can push the tire sealing bead off of the rim causing an instantaneous blow-out. Now, imagine that happening when you hit an abrupt turn at a speed which would be fine in a Toyota Camry but too fast for a swing-arm Speedster with no suspension mods. Rapidly (like in the blink of an eye), the car sways up, the wheels tuck under and lose traction, the rear end almost instantly goes into oversteer and comes around to meet the front end. If you were lucky the wheel tuck wasn't bad enough to cause the car to roll over..... A few years back, we had a member of this site do exactly that and rolled his car and died - and he was not a reckless driver.
So, if you want to continue with "Spirited Driving" with this car, please take it to a decent alignment shop and have them check/increase the front end caster to 5º - 7º to make it more stable. The rest of the alignment specs are the same as a 1970 VW sedan. You should also add a Camber Compensator to the rear suspension to manage the wheel tuck and make the car a lot safer. We've been mentioning this to some of the newbies on here and it's not a "nice-to-have" option - It's a Must-have (in my opinion) for all swing-arm cars. Yes, the Camber Compensator was developed for race applications, but it does wonders for street cars, too.
Good luck with your new toy, but remember that it uses 1950 technology with a fiberglass egg-shell body, so there is VERY little protection in a crash. We just want to see you safe while you're having fun.
The Speedstah Guy from Massachusetts.