I have searched now for some time to find some proper photos of older F1 cars and found those.
For me the McLaren MP 4-4 shows a close to ideal IC position on the opposite site of the car with low suspension pick up points on the chassis.
The Ferrari is more a compromise for good aero with a high nose and proper kinematics with a single keel suspension layout and parallel wishbones.
The modern no keel layout seems to have just aero advantages with a high nose and clean surface under the nose with the downside of a low RC and positive chamber gain under roll and bump.
It is what scarbs also says, suspension design driven by aero design these days.
From my discussions with Technical directors any analysis of front suspension is all but pointless. The cars have such a surfeit of front end grip, they can afford to throw away the book on kinematics in favour of wind tunnel results. The front suspension movement is minimal the compliance of the front tyres counts for more than geometry of RC\IC positions and camber change curve. They will point to the rear suspension as a better insight into how to control a tyre, but even then the diffusers demands to place wishbones in a cascade behind the diffuser means that even then the set up is compromised. Equally there’s a lot of other kinematics going on, with KPI, pushrods mounting on the uprights, antidive\squat and ackerman.
From what I’ve been told on flexures is their pivot is effectively taken as the centre of the flexure
I’ve not got set up sheets to confirm, but I believe I’d 2-degrees of static camber is more likely
Have you asked that just recently or some time before?
It would be interesting how much the suspension moves vertically and how much tha chassis rolls at the front and at the rear, especially at the rear, because you can see the movement in onboard views.
KPI, antidive/squat, ackerman is hard to analyze just with some pictures.