Ryar wrote: ↑16 Jun 2022, 21:11
wesley123 wrote: ↑16 Jun 2022, 20:52
Considering how they could simply tell everyone to run x mm higher this solution is just an overcomplication and just designed to save face. By making it a consequence of an individual team's issues, this would imply that it is the team who is at fault, whereas the occurence is a consequence of the ruleset itself.
Take for example, tyre life differs from car to car, can that be a ruleset issue? It's upto each team to figure out right setup or mechanical/aerodynamic solutions to handle the tyre life problem. There will be some aspects of any ruleset which produce undesirable outcomes. If some teams are managing it better than others, just like tyre usage, then it's upto other teams to manage bouncing situation as well. Why blame ruleset?
Tires are something that you can understand, what occurs here is a physical phenomenon that stems from running the car low. The ruleset with the underbody tunnels requires the car to run very low to work, which means cars will be running on the bumpstops. But thankfully the 18 inch wheels will provide less dampening than the 13 inch wheels, which means that the ruleset pretty much promotes breaking the drivers' backs.
You'd have a point if there is one outlier, but there isn't. It's literally every team on the grid that suffers with porpoising in some way, and from driver's reports they seem to suffer more and more every race weekend.
Didn't Red Bull suffer a DNF directly related to porpoising?
And outside of that, 9 out of 10 got it wrong then, seems a very unlikely scenario.
chrisc90 wrote: ↑16 Jun 2022, 21:16
Its not the ruleset that's the problem though....its the teams that cant come up with a solution to the problems.
Yeah, that sounds like they messed up the rules. If it was limited to one, I'd fully agree with you, but
it's the whole grid