I think the issue these days is the teams effectively scrutineer themselves. The FIA might choose to check something at each race (and there are reports that show that they do this) but the teams basically say "my car's legal, honest guv'." and the FIA takes their word. I wonder how easy it is for the FIA to check e.g. floor flex at the track. If they have a rig, it'll be set up to do only the bits in the regs, so a team could make bits around that test point out of jelly and feathers and if the test passes, it's legal. It's been going on forever - think back to the days where teams like Brabham had suspension that passed the test in the paddock and then dropped once out on track. It's not a new thing.Zynerji wrote: ↑06 Jul 2022, 01:48I'm just saying in general. I hate it when any team complains about a competitors engineering solutions. If it passes scrutineering, it should be off limits from concern.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑06 Jul 2022, 01:03The ones that complain changes with the ones that are being "clever". Red Bull have done plenty of complaining about stuff over the years. None of them is better than any other in that regard.
There are only two ways to avoid this problem - a genuine free for all with just FIA-specified safety items or a spec series where everyone has the same kit and no alterations are allowed. Anything in between is going to be subject to gaming of the rules.