I think we can make a pretty clear guess what the 2010 cars will look like.
Front End-
* Nose tip will be high, wide, flat (like new Red Bull or BMW)
* Chassis underside will be rounded (U-shape) cross section like the underside of Red Bull. This in turn requires ridges along upper sides of monocoque to meet minimum dimension requirements. (These ridges are the tacked-on bulges on the nose that Brawn and Toyota have recently tested in practice to determine if they are ok for driver visibility.)
* Monocoque will be as high as possible (Red Bull style) and not merely moderately high (like Brawn or Ferrari). The low vs high war will end, high monocoque officially wins.
* Ballast pod hanging under front of monocoque.
* Severe anhedral droop in front suspension. Steering arm will be between wishbones (Red Bull style), not in-line with lower wishbones (Brawn style), and not in-line with upper wishbone (Ferrari style). Brawn type solution not possible for 2010 due to U-section on bottom of monocoque.
Rear End-
* Waist packaging (area of transmission and rear diff) will be critical to airflow.
* 2009 state-of-the-art in waist packaging is Red Bull (pullrod rear suspension and rear upper wishbones mounted on upper keel to reduce height and width of bodywork in waist area). All 2010 cars will have these features at a minimum to improve waist packaging.
* Waist packaging may get more extreme in 2010. Example- differentials and driveshafts moved several inches farther forward. The driveshafts will drive the rear wheel hubs thru geared hubs mounted inside the rear wheels. Geared hubs allow several inches offset between the driveshaft axis and the hub rotation axis. This means the driveshafts themselves may rotate backwards (and may be smaller diameter in the airflow depending on the gear ratio of the geared hubs).
*In 2009 there are one or two slots on each side of the underbody to feed Brawn-style diffusers. 2010 cars that are designed from scratch (with this interpretation of the rules understood) may have several slots and several mini-diffusers extending farther forward along the car.
*There will be more integration between the lower rear wing and the Brawn-style diffusers. They will be visibly integrated more than this year’s lower rear wings and Brawn-type diffusers.
* Rear impact structures will all have some upslope to them (like Red Bull or Brawn) and will not be roughly horizontal (Like Mclaren). Moving the diff forward via hub gears allows the rear impact absorber to go forward. The impact absorber may not extend as far back in the first place.
* Air exits at rear of engine cover will become standard, air exits at rear of sidepod will become smaller (or will disappear). Engine cover air exits will be fully designed and ducted, not just an opening at the back of the engine cover.
Refueling Ban-
* The cars will not have the tank capacity to do a full race flat-out. The best overall compromise will be a tank with 90 or 95% of a full-race flat-out capacity. This allows best packaging and quickest qualifying. Secondary benefit is lighter weight at the beginning of the race. Fuel economy driving will be necessary during the race to make the full distance.
* In 2009 drivers hate slightly slower cars in front during a stint. In 2010 drivers will want a slightly slower driver in front for one stint because they can draft and save the necessary fuel. There is possibility to have unofficial team orders for the second driver (Nelson Piquet, etc.) to run in front of main driver to save main driver fuel. Engines will be run very hard due to need to run them lean/hot/on-edge-of-detonation to save fuel.
* This undersize tank scenario may seem unlikely but when you start thinking about the game theory choices (difficulty of passing, etc.) it makes sense to optimize race results via qualifying performance and performance at the beginning of the race, not theoretical race pace over the entire race.
What other design trends will turn out to be the norm in 2010? Or do you disagree with some of the above?