Cam wrote:It would seem easier to achieve a better, more stable effect by getting more underneath the car from the sides, rather than trying to add in a new way of sealing what is already there, wouldn't it?
More stable yes, but you loose expansion ratio.
And expansion ratio equals downforce if the geometrical size of the diffuser is limited by regulation.
Maybe a slight excusrion into the basic theory behind:
A diffuser generates downforce due to Bernoulli's Principle.
That says that dynamic pressure plus geodetical pressure plus static pressure is constant.
So by accelerating air (increasing dynamic pressure) you can reduce static pressure. That is what a diffuser does.
In an ideal world the exit speed of the diffuser would be equal to free air stream speed.
Then the static pressure will decrease by the square of the Ratio of the area at the exit divided by the area at the throat.
Blowing air in from the sides (behind the throat) will reduce volume flow through the throat and thus speed (and thereby decrease of static pressure = downforce) assuming that Exit Speed remains free stream speed and geometry remains untouched. Basically you want as much Speed through the throat as possible.
You could try to press air underneath from the front however you need to make sure you don't get so much increased static pressure under the nose in front of the floor overcompensating this gain. You can trade front with rear downforce to some extent with this method, though.