To play devils advocate to your view keith, I hypothesize that the bending moment, and twisting moment, are not resisted much even by a solid bar. The mechanical leverage, being enough to literally twist the chassis, is also enough to twist any bar of strut bar size. Add to that the small cross-section of the strut hat to bar interface attaching it, and the hinge seems moot. The only moment it can resist in a way the chassis can't, is the range in distance between strut towers.
Just something to consider. Clearly, each additional bit of stiffness helps, as is the reason we are adding a bar in the first place. So it might be worth it as long as you are spending the money. I just bring it up as most aftermarket are hinged for ease of manufacture and range of fitment. Many cars have no other option without fabbing a custom one. The best design, seems to be a cup surrounding the strut tower that can transfer vertical as well as horizontal load, but such designs seem rare in the aftermarket. Another consideration is mounting, seems like 3 bolts, in shear, is a suboptimal way to join the towers mechanically.
And to be clear, this is an in general query, not only to challenge oriented cars, which I suspect will do it with cage to a large extent. I was mainly curious of anyone has ever done any testing.
In the case of autox, I wonder if the chassis flex isn't a positive in some cars. I have seen an old cars handling 'ruined' by stiffinening the chassis, but it seems very platform and setup dependent.
And upon reading the linked thread, all the issued I brought up seem to be there.
My synopsis of other thread: Most agree they do something. Most seem to feel solid is better, with some articulate dissidents.
Dissenting view is basically my devils advocate stance, that the vertical motion or twisting (paralellograming etc.) Is poorly resisted even my a solid bar due to shape and location. Keith counters it is an inherent limitation but still measurably (how much?) Beneficial.
My parsing so far:
1. Seems to help stability as much as grip. Higher speed users seem to like them more, lower speed users find them less valuable, but still like them.
2. Not a magic bullet. Many forces are at play and only some of the less important ones are strongly affected, but many secondary elements and driving feel, seem to improve. Hinging seems to possibly remove some additional benefits.
3. Popular band-aid when you ripped other chassis supports out. Most likely worth it in this case.
4. Great for resting yourself above a hot engine with. Everyone agrees here. Might be enough of a selling point for me honestly.
Did I miss anything? Thanks for chiming in. I have had them on some cars, and not others. It seems to be mostly feel to me. I noticed no difference between a solid and hinged, on crappy tires, but difference between hinged and none. I just wanted to calibrate the butt dyno with data. I will jack up a few different cars, and measure between towers and report back with some data, however limited to keep the discussion moving. It seems like there is a lot left on the table with most designs.