my point might have been better represented thus .....
we find that recent N/A F1 engines had an unusually large rod ratio (and some unusual reasons for this are apparent)
unusually high bore:stroke ratios seem to be accompanied by unusually high rod ratios
eg Coventry-Climax FPF 94x90 rr=1.44, 92 3.5 V12 Honda 88x48 rr=2.32, 2000 Ferrari V10 96x41.4 rr=2.68
and Cosworth FVA rr=1.77 and DFV 85.7x64.8 rr=2.05
ok rod length seems driven by eg the crankpin and gudgeon pin diameters not being reducable as stroke is reduced
so the rr must rise as b:s ratio rises to these levels
at these high piston accelerations/high rpm/high piston weight the inertia loads become a major contributor to side thrust friction
(the Cosworth CA had max inertia load over 90% of max combustion load, and inertia loads apply on all strokes)
so with very high b:s ratio the inevitable rise in rr (this giving better geometry) gives some relief from this friction
but, typically, don't we 'always' expect a relatively small rod ratio to be better ?
variation of combustion speed is inevitable (and such intermittency is worse without rich mixtures)
given that some heat arrives later than is ideal, the small rr makes equal or better use of this heat (from maybe 30 deg atdc)
this better use may win races (as BRM found)
and the small rr may allow a higher cr
current F1 engines (unlike those N/A) have modest bore:stroke ratio, piston acceleration etc and so should allow freer choice of rr ?
the combustion load is very high, but the pistons might be heavy (eg part-steel 'diesel style' design suggested by Gilles Simon)