I'm still not getting what you're talking about with the fuel tank. Anyway such a system would likely be illegal since it is affected by forces coming from somewhere other than the wheels. I think we can safely forget that completely.
ringo wrote:The advantages are still not clear in terms of what it offers in a passive state
The advantages are likely what I said in my last post. I.e. to have a better control of one or more of the suspension modes. I'm guessing its the pitch mode because of the front/rear connection.
To control pitch in a conventional suspension, you have the heave springs at the front and the rear. Now these springs don't only work in pitch but also in heave movement which occurs when downforce acts on the car. So the heave springs have 2 jobs:
1. Control the ride height and body attitude as downforce increases
2. Provide a portion of the pitch stiffness under braking and accel
Its very likely you can't have the optimum of both of these at the same time. For example, if you setup the springs to give a good ride height control, maybe your pitch stiffness is too low...
By connecting the front to the rear, you can add a spring/damper which only works in the pitch movement and does not affect the vertical dynamics. Therefore you can have the pitch stiffness AND the vertical stiffness that you want.
So basically, the key points are:
1. This is something you can't do in a suspension without a front/rear connection
2. The only front/rear connection viable for an F1 car is hydraulic
3. Such a system involves no external tricks (i.e. using the fuel level) of power sources
4. As I said before, its been done many times before and there is quite a lot of literature around on it