No, I am not making up anything.kenshi_blind wrote: ↑15 Dec 2021, 15:10no offense but you're just making things up and moving the goalpost to fit your narrative
. In Bahrain, Hamilton didn't ignore track limit, there was no track limit before the race director issued a new ruling so no He did not ignore track limit . please do not rewrite history
. As far as the wings regulations is concerned , it was obvious to anyone that Redbull wings was not compliant with the spirit of the regulations , it passed the test but it was not compliant with the spirit of the regulations hence why they were given ample time to sort it out
. As for the pit stops , i fail to see the relevance as it affected all the teams.
This quote literally comes from Masi on F1.com, after Bahrain:
"it was mentioned very clearly in the [drivers’] meeting and the notes that it would not be monitored with regard to setting the lap time so to speak – but it will always be monitored in according with the Sporting Regulations that a lasting advantage overall must not be gained"
In other words, that a certain corner is not monitored does not mean you can abuse track limits. It may not directly lead to a lap-time gone, or to a warning after 3 successive digressions, but it is illegal. In addition, the sporting regulations simply say one should not leave the track and gain an advantage. It does not say anything about that rule only being applied in designated corners. That it took Masi 29 digressions to take action is outrageous (calculation of 3 seconds advantage by Jolyon Palmer, f1.com) and may very well have cost Max the race - were track limits applied fairly, he might have had more shots at overtaking LH fairly. The race director did not consistently apply their own rules, and with that, handed one team a potentially championship deciding advantage. Analogous to this weekend. The thing that changed compared to when the accident happened is that now we know the potential implication on the championship.
As for the other rule changes:
RB was compliant with the letter of the regulations, namely the stated tolerances, because nobody can literally design a completely rigid wing. Spirit is all fun and games, but designers cannot design on spirit - they need numbers. By changing the tolerances mid-season, the teams that took maximum advantage on the regulations as they were provided (which we should applaud, because that is what competition is about!) were penalised - forcing them to spend time and money to redesign a part (whereas competitors did not have to) to comply with regulations that could not have been known to them when they originally designed the part. That introduces huge bias. What makes it worse is that the call for change was not originating from FIA itself, but it was originating from complaints by Mercedes - the team that stood to gain - based on qualitative observations and their own judgement about what is excessive movement. Mid-season regulation changes that are not supported by imminent safety concerns (such as the tire-sidewall strengthening) are troublesome, because your are favoring some over others. It's worse if it comes from a political lobby. The underlying issue here is that the FIA did not write clear rules on what was excessive wing flexing, and RB was penalized for the shortcomings of the FIA. That is not how things should work. The FIA should take their responsibility and be clear about what excessive flexing is for future seasons, so that there would be no qualitative spirit of the rules mumbo-jumbo. Like they did with DAS. Mercedes exploited vaguely worded rules, and were not punished that season, it was just changed for the next.
For the pitstops, yes, all teams were hit, but some (that spent more time and resources perfecting pitstops) more than others. What bothers me most though is that the regulation change, under the poorly argued guise of safety, essentially came from a political lobby - with Mercedes again playing a substantial role. And the impact was there: the new regulations led to a few botched pitstops that may well have been less safe. And indirectly led to LH and VS coming together in Monza, although I do blame the incident itself there on MV.