Only the chivalry of Garth Tander - who was duelling with Todd Kelly - allowed Winterbottom to eventually pass.
"I don't think it would have changed the outcome ... but it's a concern," said Winterbottom.
"I have raised it at drivers' briefings before and they (officials) do shrug it off a bit."
At the series' halfway mark, the points table is led by Lowndes's Vodafone teammate Jamie Whincup (2052 points) 82 ahead of Winterbottom, 176 more than his FPR teammate Will Davison and 256 ahead of Lowndes.
All 17 races in 2012 have been won by either TeamVodafone or FPR - the last time two teams dominated a season start like that was way back in 1993 when Glenn Seton Racing and Dick Johnson Racing won the first 12.
"The competition is as intense as we've seen between two teams for a long time in the championship - one slip and the other one wins," Vodafone boss Roland Dane said.
"(And) I don't think he (Winterbottom) got the rub of the green.
"In a fight like that anything that advantages or disadvantages one or the other is blatantly unfair."
Lowndes took 42 points off Whincup's series lead this weekend but believed he would not know whether he was in sight of championship No.4 until the endurance rounds were completed by October.
"Every weekend is very important for all four of us now. (But) you can lose 300 points very quickly at any of those three endurance rounds," Lowndes said.
"As long as I am within that 300 point gap I going to go for it."
While Lowndes dominated, Winterbottom and Davison still exorcised the demons of last year's nightmare Ipswich round when they were lapped.
Davison finished sixth on Saturday and fourth after claiming pole on Sunday.
Winterbottom was on Sunday buoyed by finishing a whopping 14 seconds ahead of Whincup, who placed third in both weekend races.
The next round will be held at Winterbottom's home track - Sydney's Eastern Creek - from August 25-26.