The whole premise of the discussion about tray and wing flexing is that being lower to the ground results in better lap times.
Yes without touching the ground.
Since a major factor in regulating ride height is the limitation on plank wear, then any method to reduce plank wear will allow the car to be positioned lower down.
Any method to reduce plank wear will not prevent the car to be positioned lower. The car cannot get any lower than touching. The car can ride at a hair's thickness and not scratch the plank.
Plank wear isn't inextricably linked to lap time. In fact there isn't a direct relationship.
The whole idea behind reducing plank wear, is really a safety issue stemming from running a car in a range of suspension movement, that there is a high chance that the floor may stall when at the lower limits of that range.
A team doesn't want the car to touch the track at all. They don't want to wear the plank to some how get lap time. The plank wear rule isn't about that.
What a team may do is set the suspension at a desired rate which may invadvertently allow a range of movement with a minimum height that sets the floor bellow the wheel's contact surface (floor contiguous to the ground).
The team doesn't want the car to touch the ground however, but they may choose a suspension setting that say, is fitting for 98% of the lap, but not hard enough to prevent bottoming in 2% of the lap. That 2% is a side effect not a desire, but they'll live with it.
That 2% may not happen at sections of track where downforce is very important, in fact the 2% may be 0% under certain fuel levels, or tyre pressures.
And it may be 5% at certain tyre temperatures and pressure, and with heavy fuel.
So touching the track with the floor isn't a goal. The goal like many things in F1 is to be at the limit but not go over it. Running the plank on the ground is over the limit.
The FIA doesn't want to give the teams too much liberty with that 2% negligence. The FIA is avoiding a safety hazard, more so than some attempt to dampen performance.
And we know the history behind stalled floors and the nature of the cars back then that provoked this ruling.
All of this comes to mind when i think of setting a car up to run near the ground.
I still don't get the logic of
a ground activated floor. And why the team should care about reducing wear, when the plank has to first be grating off on the asphalt to cater for such concerns.
Make the floor bend up on it's own, free of external contact with the ground so the car can run closer but not touch, then i will agree with such a system warranting the attention by the FIA.
Make it touch the ground so it bends yet is still touching the ground anyway,loses the plot.