gcdugas wrote:mcdenife wrote:gridwalker wrote:
They can't, because that happens anyway regardless of how much the technology costs.
Case in point : Renault's mass damper system.
This was/is different as it was not a change in regulation but a ruling (which I totally disagreed with) just as with the DD. The one that comes close I think was the Michelin front tire issue. That was a change in the interpretation and hence a change in regs. Which of course meant that michelin had to redesign the tire and their teams had pound around testing the new tire burning some more banknotes in the process. No, what I meant was a team spends dollares on some new rig or design tool only for the FIA to again ban it, without consultation, in the name of cost cutting. Sometimes I think they should be made to reimburse teams for things like this maybe then they will think first and act later.
It matters not whether it is a ruling or a reg. It is the "unilateral" and "arbitrary" and "uncertain" and "unpredictable" way in which the FIA conducts itself that is essential. They can have an arbitrary and unpredictable reg or an arbitrary and unpredictable ruling and it makes no difference. Both are unacceptable and both are standard operating procedure of the FIA... hence the FIA is no longer acceptable with Max at the helm.
Precisely.
Anyway, can't a "ruling" merely be a regulation change by precedent? In the case of mass dampers, it meant that the term "movable aerodynamic devices" could now include internal components that do not interact with the airflow, simply because the device contains moving components and their movement enables the car to maintain a more aerodynamically efficient balance.
By including these devices under the ban on movable aerodynamics, the FIA managed to set a precedent that creates a gray area under the regulations which could enable them to ban any device which effects a car's aero balance on a whim simply because it contains moving parts.
Novel suspension systems could be banned under this precedent, especially if the FIA deem them too costly.
It is a trick that has been used in the law courts again and again : insignificant semantics of an arbitrary ruling can be used at a later date in the most extraordinary circumstances ... It's often simpler, easier and quicker to make a usefully vague ruling than it is to sit down and negotiate a complex piece of legislation.
I always thought that the regs relating to movable ballast were more applicable to the mass dampers, however when you look at it through the prism of the FIA setting precedents, using the regulations relating to movable ballast wouldn't have enabled the FIA to make such a sweeping technical power grab.
The FIA have gotten used to wielding this kind of power & are attempting the coup de grâce with the 2010 regulations. If the teams settle for such a drastic change in formula without their views being taken into account, then the teams will never have a say in the sport again.
Precedents are very important & should never be ignored.
This is why Ferrari are going to fight this until the bitter end.