I was considering putting just a bit of camber on the wheels so they would only actually run on the ouiter edge of the wheel, instead of the whole face of it...sound logical ?
but we were careless with aerodynamics.
The graphite you mentioned..not graphite grease..but rather dry graphite ..correct ?
You want to do just the opposite with the wheels - angle them so that the
inner edge of the wheels are the only contact points. This forces the wheels out away from the body as it rolls so they don't rub on it.
Also, if your particular group's rules allow (some don't), set the car up so only the 3 longest spinning and most concentric running wheels contact the track. This can be done by raising the worst wheel just slightly, and offsetting a tiny bit of weight to the opposite corner of the car body to keep the bad wheel up.
As far as aerodynamics go, car body shape has negligible effect on objects this small & light going the distance they travel. There's a good writeup somewhere on the net about it, done by aerospace enginners who did testing in a wind tunnel with various body shapes. The winner at my Son's Pack a couple of years ago had a car he named "The Flying Brick" It was just the basic rectangular shape the body came as, with a rough-textured red paint on it.
You want to use graphite. Don't go nuts and pack the hubs though. Burnish it in with your fingers on the wheels' outer diameter, and on the body if the wheels can contact it anywhere (you should avoid building so that the wheels can touch the body though).
Make sure that the car tracks straight for at least 10' when you roll it down an incline. If not, the wheels on one side are gonna rub on the protrusion on the track under the car, slowing it down.
If possible, set up a simple track (We use a 12' long board with some cardboard strips stapled to the sides) at home and run your car down it as many times as you can. This helps to break in and smooth out any tight areas in the build.
As was said before, you want to get right up to the max weight. I drill a hole and push a BB in and put a couple of staples in the wood in case the official scale reads heavier than mine. If it does, I remove BB and/or staples. I bring an extra BB and staples to add if it weighs light.
My Son's car won 1st place out of ~35 entrants one year, 3rd out of ~90 another year. Other years, well, not so good. Lotta luck involved, and sometimes other guys build better cars (OR CHEAT!
)
EDIT - One more thing. I have no 'scientific evidence' for this, but many guys swear that installing the majority of the weight just ahead of the rear axle helps for some reason.