There is a recent trend in sports car/supercar design that I do not understand - why are the rear wheels a larger diameter than the front? I'm not asking about width (obviously rear wheels are wider to fit wider tires), I'm asking about diameter. It seems that every modern sports car - from the Corvette and Evora to the LaFerrari and 918 Spyder - has rear wheels that are of a larger diameter than the fronts. This makes no sense to me. What is the functional purpose for this, if any? It isn't because of the brakes, because the front brakes are usually larger. As far as I can tell, all it does is increase unsprung weight. Is there any functional reason to have larger diameter rear wheels, or is it just a styling thing?
Thanks.