I looked in to early solar car design before, it really is interesting.
One of the reasons they are so high is because they require such a huge flat surface for the solar panels yet require the smallest frontal area possible.
SO, instead of setting the body down low and having the wheels peirce the main body (compromising the surface area for the panels and also casting shadows,) whilst you do your best to stop air going underneath is only ever going to be an efficiency compromise.
Your much better off taking the car up with the wheels having a wider track and getting a true aerofoil shape (when looking side on) for the main body, it allows you to have a massive surface area, tiny frontal area, and as these compete on the roads i suppose they need to have a certain amount of both road presence and the ability to tackle a sleeping police man.
Flyn Frog roughly how wide is the track on that vehicle?? Mine is only 540mm and yours looked considerably wider, so there probably isn't a vast differance in CofG, we'd have to get the car to roughly 55degs before it would roll.
Oh and I'll be using Fibreglass first of all for the body the chassis is made of aluminium/fibreglass sandwich and ali/ali sandwich. The two Shell eco cars i helped with are mostly carbon its got a carbon body and a carbon/nomex chassis.
http://s18.photobucket.com/albums/b134/ ... GREENY.jpg
Theres the shell Eco cars at Silverstone