Like I said, the fastest cars on the grid right now are mostly slim nose cars, not wide-nose cars. Most of the teams this year are running slim-nose cars, only a few teams are running wide-nose cars. So based on your logic, does that mean those running wide noses figured out some breakthrough that the rest of the teams did not? The more likely explanation is that the teams running wide noses may have got it a bit wrong.
First off you are confusing correlation with causality. Just because the "fastest cars", as you have deemed them, have narrow noses says absolutely nothing about what is causing this parity in performance. Even if you could prove a correlation between nose width and Australian GP performance (statistically you lack the volume of data to do so), this would still not be sufficient evidence to condemn this nose design. The fact is that their are so many other factors influencing performance that you have ignored completely.
Second why did Torro Rosso qualified at the back of the grid? By your logic they should have been at the very front with the RBRs because they have the most narrow nose. And if you tell me that they had other issues affecting their performance I will refer you to your original post where you stated.
the fastest cars have slim noses.
We get it, you don't like the design of the R29's nose. And yes a wider nose, like that on the R29, will produce more drag. I would say there is a good chance Pat Symons knows this as well. The only way Renault loses the wide nose cone is if they do so in conjunction with a major update of the entire body work, including Brawn-esque diffuser. This would constitute a change in the fundamental aero philosophy of the car, based on an updated set of assumptions regarding what is permissible.
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so" - Mark Twain