https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -10-15.pdfOverstated excluded costs pursuant to Article 3.1(a) of the Financial Regulations (concerning
catering services);
3.1 In calculating Relevant Costs, the following costs and amounts within Total Costs of the
Reporting Group must be excluded ("Excluded Costs"):
(a) All costs Directly Attributable to Marketing Activities;
I get what you are trying to say, but cant agree, you are comparing apples and oranges, you cant compare changing an engine, some thing pretty much all teams do, to breaking the financial regs of which only one has broken, one is allowed to be broken, as per the rules, you just take a penalty for doing it to many times. the other isnt supposed to be broken at all, its even worded so teams cant look for gray areas with out first informing the FIA of their intentions and get clearence, the fact Redbull failed to adhear to them is completely different to changing an engine.Dee wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 20:53Red Bull hid nothing and did not intentionally go over the cap, Mercedes hid nothing and intentionally went over the cap.MadMax wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 20:27It's not cheating if you do it publicly and in full knowledge of the whole paddock and the FIA et al and in accordance with the rules laid down. Hiding an engine allocation breach would be cheating - changing an engine and saying "we are within the engine allocation limit". I guess that's the correct analogy here.
You have to analyse Red Bulls position
The FIA said because they fed RBPT staff, that money should be included.
RB's mistake was thinking the FIA would have common sense and allow them to adjust their budget to only include money spent on people that worked in RBR.
Their downfall was thinking they could change things after when they should have changed things from the start.
The Tax credit was owed to them and if they had been allowed to resubmit, would have reduced their overspend to 400,000. Changing the food allocation would have brought them under the cap entirely.
From 2005 to 2020, there has never been any scandal associated to RBR and I am 100% sure they didn't intend to be over the cap last year. It is not in their nature.
This is in the excludable partdans79 wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 21:32I'm not sure why people keep saying it's about food for the team or the powertrain branch, as the aba says nothing about that.
the only thing the ABA says that was wrong related to food is as follows.
https://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... 6.32_1.pdfhttps://www.fia.com/sites/default/files ... -10-15.pdfOverstated excluded costs pursuant to Article 3.1(a) of the Financial Regulations (concerning
catering services);
3.1 a3.1 In calculating Relevant Costs, the following costs and amounts within Total Costs of the
Reporting Group must be excluded ("Excluded Costs"):
(a) All costs Directly Attributable to Marketing Activities;
please point to where the FIA said RB breached a regulation even close to this in the ABA! The aba specifically references 3.1(a)
FalseMosin123 wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 21:37I get what you are trying to say, but cant agree, you are comparing apples and oranges, you cant compare changing an engine, some thing pretty much all teams do, to breaking the financial regs of which only one has broken,Dee wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 20:53Red Bull hid nothing and did not intentionally go over the cap, Mercedes hid nothing and intentionally went over the cap.MadMax wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 20:27
It's not cheating if you do it publicly and in full knowledge of the whole paddock and the FIA et al and in accordance with the rules laid down. Hiding an engine allocation breach would be cheating - changing an engine and saying "we are within the engine allocation limit". I guess that's the correct analogy here.
You have to analyse Red Bulls position
The FIA said because they fed RBPT staff, that money should be included.
RB's mistake was thinking the FIA would have common sense and allow them to adjust their budget to only include money spent on people that worked in RBR.
Their downfall was thinking they could change things after when they should have changed things from the start.
The Tax credit was owed to them and if they had been allowed to resubmit, would have reduced their overspend to 400,000. Changing the food allocation would have brought them under the cap entirely.
From 2005 to 2020, there has never been any scandal associated to RBR and I am 100% sure they didn't intend to be over the cap last year. It is not in their nature., its even worded so teams cant look for gray areas with out first informing the FIA of their intentions and get clearence, the fact Redbull failed to adhear to them is completely different to changing an engine.one is allowed to be broken, as per the rules, you just take a penalty for doing it to many times. the other isnt supposed to be broken at all
Redbull have been called up for all sorts of out side the rules infringments, they just always seem to get 3 months to correct it. Last season was the perfect example, 6 races they was given to fix an illegal front wing they was found to be using, When RedBull accused merc of having a flexy rear wing, a new test was out a week later...... Mercs wing passed the test, but the FIA still kept it for 2 weeks? to do extra tests make sure it was legit..
FIA is full of double standards, US GP, two cars in the same quali session go over the white line, one loses his only lap time, delete, gone, the redbull of max was allowed to go through even though he should have had his lap deleted, did exactly the same infringment as the other car.
Been like it for a while, Redbull and Max seem to have a different set of rules to every body else.
1) the comparison on both moral and regulatory grounds just does not make any sense. Both are written in the rules, for both transgressions the possible penalties have been defined. For the PU a fixed position penalty for each component, for the cap overspend the penalty sits between a wide range of penalties. Both are clearly defined what the consequences are or could be.Dee wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 20:53Red Bull hid nothing and did not intentionally go over the cap, Mercedes hid nothing and intentionally went over the cap.MadMax wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 20:27It's not cheating if you do it publicly and in full knowledge of the whole paddock and the FIA et al and in accordance with the rules laid down. Hiding an engine allocation breach would be cheating - changing an engine and saying "we are within the engine allocation limit". I guess that's the correct analogy here.
You have to analyse Red Bull's position
The FIA said because they fed RBPT staff, that money should be included.
RB's mistake was thinking the FIA would have common sense and allow them to adjust their budget to only include money spent on people that worked in RBR.
Their downfall was thinking they could change things after when they should have changed things from the start.
The Tax credit was owed to them and if they had been allowed to resubmit, would have reduced their overspend to 400,000. Changing the food allocation would have brought them under the cap entirely.
From 2005 to 2020, there has never been any scandal associated to RBR and I am 100% sure they didn't intend to be over the cap last year. It is not in their nature.
You literally quoted it yourself in your own post
I did quote specifically what they said was a breach, 3.1 (a) ,Dee wrote: ↑02 Nov 2022, 21:58You literally quoted it yourself in your own post
Overstated excluded costs pursuant to Article 3.1(a) of the Financial Regulations (concerning
catering services);
They excluded RBPT catering because they are the PU goods and services but because they were being fed in the RBR building, the FIA said it had to be included.
All costs Directly Attributable to Marketing Activities;