Which is why the punishment in the regs should have been very heavy e.g. DSQ. Make the outcome of messing up a "nuclear option" so that the teams wouldn't risk it.
Which is why the punishment in the regs should have been very heavy e.g. DSQ. Make the outcome of messing up a "nuclear option" so that the teams wouldn't risk it.
There are two ‘levels’ of breach, minor & major; we have not been informed of where the line is, hopefully the teams have not either.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Jul 2023, 23:33Which is why the punishment in the regs should have been very heavy e.g. DSQ. Make the outcome of messing up a "nuclear option" so that the teams wouldn't risk it.
My comment was in response to you saying that the FIA doesn't have the resources compared to the teams. If you make the punishment for breaking the rules big enough, people won't break them. The budget cap should be like the treatment of track limits - you're over then you lose big time. If the result of being over the budget cap limit was DSQ then the teams wouldn't risk going over or using clever methods of accounting for fear of being DSQ.Stu wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 08:46There are two ‘levels’ of breach, minor & major; we have not been informed of where the line is, hopefully the teams have not either.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Jul 2023, 23:33Which is why the punishment in the regs should have been very heavy e.g. DSQ. Make the outcome of messing up a "nuclear option" so that the teams wouldn't risk it.
A true penalty does not need to be DSQ though, a simple budget reduction would have a massive impact (although it could only occur for the season following the investigation).
What we have seen in operation this year is the result of what the FIA considers to be a MINOR breach (the FIA taking a similar line to that taken with track limit’s violations) - which seems sensible from a governance perspective.
I’m not sure how a retrospective penalty could be sensibly applied.
The FIA had the perfect opportunity last year and also have ability to have closer racing this year, for some reason they failed to do so.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 09:42My comment was in response to you saying that the FIA doesn't have the resources compared to the teams. If you make the punishment for breaking the rules big enough, people won't break them. The budget cap should be like the treatment of track limits - you're over then you lose big time. If the result of being over the budget cap limit was DSQ then the teams wouldn't risk going over or using clever methods of accounting for fear of being DSQ.Stu wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 08:46There are two ‘levels’ of breach, minor & major; we have not been informed of where the line is, hopefully the teams have not either.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 Jul 2023, 23:33
Which is why the punishment in the regs should have been very heavy e.g. DSQ. Make the outcome of messing up a "nuclear option" so that the teams wouldn't risk it.
A true penalty does not need to be DSQ though, a simple budget reduction would have a massive impact (although it could only occur for the season following the investigation).
What we have seen in operation this year is the result of what the FIA considers to be a MINOR breach (the FIA taking a similar line to that taken with track limit’s violations) - which seems sensible from a governance perspective.
I’m not sure how a retrospective penalty could be sensibly applied.
That way, the FIA doesn't need to have the same resources as the teams - they can take their time with the resources they have because no team is going to risk DSQ for a few thousand over budget.
The only sensible way, other than cash fines (to cover extra policing) would be disqualification or removal of X points from the next season. The complaint could be, OK, so they don't turn up, but they then get hit by sponsors for not showing the adverts during the race. Taking part would have to be included or there would be no payments from FIA/F1 ontop of the loss.chrisc90 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 13:32I thought there was a line between the minor and major? 7.5m wasn't it from memory?
Thing is though.... Are we really going to go back and strip a title off someone over a year ago and hand it out to someone else? just doesn't seem viable in the slightest really. DSQ from the current season (which would be 1/2 way through 2023 in the case of the 2022 budgeting reports) also becomes a bit stupid. Sponsorship issues, entry fees to race in the current season, the races would become less exciting, driver contracts, Fan base not attending races. DSQ from a previous season or current season just wont realistically work.
I mean if you disqualify team X from 2023, then presumably their 2023 budget cannot be counted as they aren't racing/competing, so technically they could throw unlimited resources at projects and wind tunnel time for next year when they are allowed to race. No rules as they aren't competing in that season.
A reminder for the penalties:
https://e2.365dm.com/22/09/768x432/skys ... 0930163832
Some of them just aren't really feasible.
The FIA has already said they wont strip titles of anyone though. So removing someone from a previous year isnt going to work.Tiny73 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:03If the penalties aren’t punitive then what’s the point of the cap at all? DSQ or points being docked from the previous season is feasible given the transgression happened within that season and had a positive impact on the results from that season. Fines carried forward don’t reflect that the benefit has been taken from a previous transgression.
I've not heard them say that. But if true, that what they are saying, go ahead and cheat, we won't punish you.chrisc90 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:08The FIA has already said they wont strip titles of anyone though. So removing someone from a previous year isnt going to work.Tiny73 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:03If the penalties aren’t punitive then what’s the point of the cap at all? DSQ or points being docked from the previous season is feasible given the transgression happened within that season and had a positive impact on the results from that season. Fines carried forward don’t reflect that the benefit has been taken from a previous transgression.
Which mitigates the point of the cap. If the punishment isn’t punitive then why bother?f1jcw wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:10I've not heard them say that. But if true, that what they are saying, go ahead and cheat, we won't punish you.chrisc90 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:08The FIA has already said they wont strip titles of anyone though. So removing someone from a previous year isnt going to work.Tiny73 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:03If the penalties aren’t punitive then what’s the point of the cap at all? DSQ or points being docked from the previous season is feasible given the transgression happened within that season and had a positive impact on the results from that season. Fines carried forward don’t reflect that the benefit has been taken from a previous transgression.
No, I don't think anyone would say go back a year and remove a title from someone - it would have to be DSQ from the season they're in at the time it's shown to be a breach. Or just thrown out of the following year - that would be the real "nuclear option" because it potentially kills a team. "So, Mr TP, do you want to risk going over the limit and then standing up in front your entire staff and telling them they're all unemployed? No, thought not, so don't breach the cap."chrisc90 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 13:32I thought there was a line between the minor and major? 7.5m wasn't it from memory?
Thing is though.... Are we really going to go back and strip a title off someone over a year ago and hand it out to someone else? just doesn't seem viable in the slightest really. DSQ from the current season (which would be 1/2 way through 2023 in the case of the 2022 budgeting reports) also becomes a bit stupid. Sponsorship issues, entry fees to race in the current season, the races would become less exciting, driver contracts, Fan base not attending races. DSQ from a previous season or current season just wont realistically work.
I mean if you disqualify team X from 2023, then presumably their 2023 budget cannot be counted as they aren't racing/competing, so technically they could throw unlimited resources at projects and wind tunnel time for next year when they are allowed to race. No rules as they aren't competing in that season.
A reminder for the penalties:
https://e2.365dm.com/22/09/768x432/skys ... 0930163832
Some of them just aren't really feasible.
I think something like "100 points deducted from each of the drivers (and thus 200 from the team's points) for each million (or part thereof) over the limit" for the next season, but your wind tunnel and CFD time will be determined on the actual positions your drivers finish - so still get hit for that. That would certainly focus minds.chrisc90 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:08The FIA has already said they wont strip titles of anyone though. So removing someone from a previous year isnt going to work.Tiny73 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 14:03If the penalties aren’t punitive then what’s the point of the cap at all? DSQ or points being docked from the previous season is feasible given the transgression happened within that season and had a positive impact on the results from that season. Fines carried forward don’t reflect that the benefit has been taken from a previous transgression.
I can see sense in most of the penalties.chrisc90 wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 13:32I thought there was a line between the minor and major? 7.5m wasn't it from memory?
…
A reminder for the penalties:
https://e2.365dm.com/22/09/768x432/skys ... 0930163832
Some of them just aren't really feasible.