Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Aug 2023, 20:28
AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 Aug 2023, 20:07
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Aug 2023, 10:47
If one accepts that a cost and resource cap are the right thing to do (and many don't, of course), then there has to be a "line in the sand" over which lies the land of bad things to do that get you in trouble. The FIA's problem, as we all know, is where to draw that line and how to monitor teams stepping over it.
I guess one has to wonder how useful a single lap top is for assessing the performance of an F1 car's aero. If it was that simple, the teams wouldn't have massive computer resources to do these things. Making use of the "big iron" back at base in some way (either the F1 team's "big iron" or a side-hustle project's "big iron") would be an obvious red flag. And I guess that's what the TD is aiming at stopping. Use of a side-hustle's resources to apply large amounts of naughty info to the F1 car.
You wouldn't have to use a laptop to "assess aero". You could draw exploratory shapes in your free time due to idle curiosities and use that knowledge to present more finished ideas at work.
A few post above, a Mercedes engineer developed an entire LMP car in his free time. You don't think some engineer somewhere else plays around with "unrelated" F1 car surface models in his free time? They most certainly do. The lines are very blurry.
There's no doubt that there's a silent pressure in the industry now to use up your free, unpaid time, thinking about F1 and you will ultimately always find the willing participants.
He modelled it, he didn't develop it. Anyone can sit down and draw up shapes but until they're run through proper CFD and WT time, they're just that - shapes.
It's no different to Newey sitting on the beach with his sketch book - everyone knows that engineers do that sort of thing by habit - it's part of what drives them. And that's fine.
Sitting at a terminal running full CFD on your F1 design is what the TD is about - and it's especially about not doing so at somewhere that isn't the F1 team's bit of the factory.
A few days ago you and others were stating that the AMR Valkyrie and the mythical RB17 were what the TD is about.
Ferrari have split an element of their team off to develop the Ferrari LMH (and they have been quite open about utilising some F1 techniques in the car).
Audi will be bringing their own WEC experience to F1 with Sauber.
This guy at Mercedes may have done this project ‘for jollies’, but it will be a part of his learning experience (and he will be able to take what he has learned directly into his day-job).
None of those are wrong things to do.
Concurrent ‘black ops’ style programs run ‘off-the-books’ are wrong things to do.
Delineating the two is what the FIA need to do. An impossible task?
This is not limited to purely aero research, either.
Perspective - Understanding that sometimes the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.