I just had another thought on this issue. Its a good example of why you cant draw conclusions so simply. Something else to consider as a cause of a boundary trip fence on a diffuser.
It's really hard to define what is the "boundary layer" there is a dictionary definition but essentially we are merely humans observing the physics of the world around us and on top of that we cant measure everything without effecting it in the process. If low velocity is building up on a surface people tend to define it as "boundary layer". Now if the boundary layer buildup exceeds what you calculate it to be (and this happens ALL the time) you kind of scratch your head, but depending on budgets and time you pursue what you must to get a car ready and performing at the best you can with the tools and money you have. Especially when you have a rolling floor, everyone thinks that fixes everything.
So you go ahead and call it boundary layer, you make a device to trip that boundary layer and wham you get the RDF value you wanted or you think is competitive next year. Reality is that a wind tunnel has compromises of its own and inaccuracies of its own. Someone I really look up to once told me that you never really understand the car until you designed and tested the wind tunnel as well.
This could have been an issue with rolling belt geometry or sizing, effects from something else on the floor, nozzle geometry, straighteners or something else I haven't thought of. Pitot tubes are not really good at telling you a larger picture just a single momentary location's value. Nothing ever tells you why.
If your CFD and your tunnel data don't converge, what do you trust? A mathematical system designed around giving the same results as a wind tunnel or a wind tunnel?
Nobody else copied it, it only worked in one tunnel. Might explain their car's performance if it were true. DId that feature appear on the new car after they pulled out?
Just a theory, no real way to test it back in time, but imagining it is a good exercise for me. Keep me on my toes, always rethinking and rechecking my test data. What is 100% accurate on one car can be totally screwy on another. Just something to think about. I've seen this happen before in similar fashion. In my vivid imagination F1 tunnels are so amazing they always give perfect values but reality may be a bit different.