the area under the curve (over 10500 rpm) will suffer due to the fuel rate cap
accelerating quickly through the gears the rules would not appear to prevent fuel systems having a convenient dynamic characteristic
such that for the brief excursions significantly over 10500 the ideal AFR is maintained despite the fuel rate limit ex-tank
(if the injection pulse demanded is unchanged, only God would know if the actual fuel rate briefly exceeded the magic 100)
such limited use of iirc 3cc of fuel 'accumulated' at eg 10500 is apparently not intended to be prevented by the rules that were written
remember the fuel will compress by 4.3% at 500 bar
remember the thousands of hours of transient dynamometry
not so under steadier conditions, when apparently the AFR must fall or the boost must fall
fwiw I still think (after 4 years) the least depletion of 'area under the curve' will be by loading the turbine to raise the exhaust backpressure
laughably, the FIA fuel rate metering only claims to be 'accurate' to +- 0.5%
isn't this equivalent to eg Mr Usain Bolt having to run 100.5 m and an adjacent competitor having to run 99.5 m (or vice versa)
btw wuzak - you seem to be using HHV for your efficiency - but LHV is the standard for engine efficiency ?