After the first round of CFD analysis, I summed up that the car would benefit from reducing pressure in the wheel arch, bringing in the CoP forwards. This would enable the use of a small front diffuser on the trailing edge of the front splitter to draw air into the newly formed low pressure region. In addition, some vortex generation at the side of the front clam would reduce pressure in the gap between the tyre and bodywork, helping to reduce pressure ahead of the front wheels. To bring the balance rearwards, a larger diffuser would reduce the pressure on the whole underside, especially at the rear.
So with that information to hand, I modelled a few changes (Google Chrome recommended). In addition to the changes above, I also raised the front of the splitter so that it was angled closer to the direction of airflow towards it in an effort to reduce the separation caused by modelling with square edges! Looking at the pressure map, you can see that I made a small error in the right-front wheel arch, which resulted in a high pressure area all around. On the left side, you can see that there is low pressure on the front diffuser and that the pressure on the leading edge of the tyre is lower than that of the other side. In hindsight, I would have modelled just one side of the car with the changes to more easily see the differences.
There are some meshing problems on the leading edge of the splitter, hence the high/low pressure variation. You can also see high pressure build-up on the air exit on the sidepods, mostly down to the crude implementation of the changes. At the rear, there's a much larger low pressure area thanks to the extra floor area of the larger diffuser and the low pressure it generates, specifically at the point of angle change.
Skipping the streamlines and slices, let's move onto the drag and downforce. Drag is up 20N, whilst lift is also down 46N. It's clearly at the rear too as the CoP is 65 metres ahead of the car showing that there's lift at the front and downforce at the rear. The downforce/drag distribution graphs show this well. The splitter produces less downforce now, although this may be down to the meshing issues exposed in the pressure map. The figures at the front of the car are also skewed by the modelling mistake I made in blocking off the rear of the wheel arch. The main point of downforce generation has been at the diffuser.
Most interestingly, I've also got the full results as a download and can process this in the tool of my choice, which happens to be the free Paraview. So here's a little view of the front diffuser in action. You can see the vortex flowing into the sidepod and the air washes down the side of the car and under the rear wing. The high speed air (red) shows why it's low pressure under the splitter.