I’m not sure who told you that, but one wheel spinning faster than another won’t affect the timing at all.
Took a while for me to recollect where i heard that from, but a fair while ago i was sad enough to watch through 7 or 8 hours of a guy rebuilding a 182 Cup engine on youtube and when he got to the timing portion he explained this exact theory, im under the impression hes no stranger to the f4r and actually races them (presumably in the 182 Cup championship, or maybe some other class) and it made logical sense to me, but then again i suppose he is just another guy on the internet, just like you. So maybe i shouldn't take it as Gospel, just trying to perhaps steer chambers in the right direction.
It's time stamped, so youll get straight to the point. I probably could of explained it better but i watched this probably almost a year ago.
Out of interest, whats your alternative theory as to why cars throw out timing? ive seen and heard of other people / teams constantly checking timing in between race sessions so depending how sensitive or prone a car is to doing so would be a factor i presume
Edit: its 28:50 incase your browser doesnt start at the time stamp