But isn't part of the game to determine which set-up best reflects the desired application? That's part of engineering, which differentiates the better companies from the inferior ones.
If I can make a faster bike by spinning the rear wheel when I test, that's a competitive advantage, which I don't necessarily want to give away.
With regard to the gap: Look says a small gap creates drag, so they go to a larger, uniform gap. Well, what about blowing out the gap, then, like "standard" bike frames, saving mass? Or, if it weren't forbidden by the UCI (applies to triathlon? Not to most US time trials..) the old Kestrel without a seat tube? In other words, is there an optimum gap, below or above which one shouldn't go?