Now as we all agree
that even small amount of floor rake produces significant (for F1 i define significant as > 0.1%) amount of downforce and all teams are considering this during car design and CFD/wind tunnel runs let's go back to topic and try to understand why higher then average rake works for RB7.
Even small change in rake angle cause significant changes of front wing ride height (1cm for every 1/4 degree, more or less).
I'm not gonna to place new graphs of wings Cl and Cd in ground effect to discuss this, so just let's suppose McLaren's estimations of 1cm lower FW ride height are worth > 0,5s of lap time are true.
That's easy part - every team could just dial more rake into their setup and immediately gain FW efficiency.
Tricky part is at the rear. More rake means more rear ride height and more air volume/mass under the car one have to accelerate (flow speed under the car is where floor downforce comes from), so bigger pressure gradients needed to move this bigger mass of air at the same speed as on less raked cars.
Geometry of floor/diffuser/beam wing combo is restricted by the rules and doesn't vary much between teams.
The key differentiator will be then how much energy the flow to the gurney and beam wing has, which can then be converted to low pressure behind beam wing and to create strong vortexes behind gurney (2 of them, counter-rotating along rear gurney wall, lower one helping to extract more air from diffuser).
McLaren and maybe TR have good potential to go this direction with their designs, but in RB7 this concept has already 3-4 years of development history.
The biggest problem i see with this is concept is there is no real room to improve it further. Even KERS integration seems to be out of reach at the moment, and those big cooling outlets are already a compromise. Newey not even tried to look closely at Renault's solution (biggest potential IMO) - there is simply no space in RB7 left to accomodate this.
@N12ck: reference plane is the floor, you can run as much rake as you want.
@ringo: not as funny as CFD, but LOL anyway. Thanks.