It seems we can expect some changes in performance at Spain.
I'll say! This is serious stuff. Put 2000N under the nose of an F1 and it comes pretty close to lifting the front clear off the test platform already. That particular attention is being paid to the entire underbody with the plank removed while the force is applied to the front implies that complying to the test might force
actual design changes to the entire chassis for some teams. If such modifications are to be made, wouldn't that mean that in practice these teams must also subject the changes to a new FIA crash test?
If there's a radical shakeup in the order of the teams' performance, there are going to be criticisms of what the FIA action has achieved in terms of the season beginning in very even terms as far as the top two teams are concerned. I'm certainly interested to see whether the teams will remain as nonchalant about this as they were the last time the test was changed.
The front of the chassis reference plane touching the ground in high speed, experiencing gradually increasing stress, as I understand it, isn't the main reason why there needs to be some intentional deflection of the underbody. Sudden loads as hitting a kerb are a bigger problem and the interesting question is whether a vertical 2000N is an accurate estimate to still allow some deflection of such forces or are we going to see even small driver mistakes result in drastic aero damage, shards of carbon fiber flying? On tracks where the kerbs are high, drivers could actually be forced to take very conservative lines, certainly further diminishing "straight fight" overtaking opportunities in favor of dull opportunism from other's mistakes and misfortunes.
On the face of it, some shuffling in the order of things may result in some surprising races. But as was the case with the TMD, that the FIA doesn't force changes in such basic things as chassis design and construction only during the off-season kinda diminishes the logic of the championships. These things have gone through some scrutiny before the season started, after all.