This was hinted at in a few posts on the Monza race thread - so thought I’d try and get some discussion going to whether the penalties still match the ‘offence’.
The first one I’ll bring up, apologies for the highlighting one team/driver, and it is in no discredit to them, it’s just a good example.
Russell overtaking Ocon off the track and failing to give the place back. Correctly punished with a 5 second penalty.
However, does leaving the track and gaining a lasting advantage not come into play aswell? Considering the car failed to give the position back and thus used the clean air to gain an advantage that he otherwise wouldn’t have been able to gain - without taking more laps to pass Ocon. In my opinion that also falls foul of gaining a lasting advantage.
We have also seen Alonso get creative at the start of a GP, Russia 2021?? Where he took to the run off area and managed to gain the advantage aswell as overtake cars, from memory. He openly admitted that was his intention - same as Russell admitted he wouldn’t give the place back.
Another hypothetical scenario would/could have been Max following Sainz for 15 laps at the start of Monza. Sainz was a few tenths slower, but the overall speed of both cars meant a overtake was ‘challenging’ at the end of the straight.
Max could have took to the run off area between turn 1 and 2, gotten ahead of Sainz and failed to give the position back. Knowing Max himself was xyz a lap faster than Sainz - the penalty of 5 seconds would have soon been squashed. Infact I’m sure Max pulled 8 seconds on Sainz before putting a handful of laps later.
Nothing untoward towards any named driver above - just very recent examples I can use for the post discussion.
With 5 second penalty covering the majority of infringements these days - is 5 seconds really enough given The gaps we typically see between drivers and through the grid?
Sometimes taking a penalty might be the best opportunity you have shortening your race time - especially if your in a bit of a dead area.
Therefore, I’d propose the following of the position must be given back before 1 lap following the offence (in case of overtaking off track). For example overtaking someone off track at turn 1, lap 10, you would have until the end of lap 11 start/finish line to give the place back. Failing doing so would mean a 10 second penalty and being ordered to drop back behind the car you overtook off track before the following lap. Teams are usually pretty good at when they know to hand positions back, and same with the FIA - so the laps ‘grace’ would be enough for any investigation to happen.
Causing a collision should also get a extra 5 seconds minimum - so in region of 10-17.5 seconds. This should be a sliding scale of the outcome of the car in contact with. If contact was made resulting in the race of the ‘innocent’ car being compromised through a pitstop or damage needing to be fixed in a live race - then the car at fault should also be greater penalised using the sliding scale.
Basically, and would probably need more thought and detail on the situations I gave, that penalties are no longer a penalty where by it doesn’t penalise the driver. If the penalties are made harsh enough it effectively nerfs your race pretty hard, then it will stop people from openly admitting it’s more worth taking the penalty that say giving a position back.
I also think the engine/ component penalties should be worse overall to stop people from taking multiple components over the allowance. For example the first new component took outside the allowance is 10 places - then further ones for the second over the allowance result in a further 10 places added meaning you start from the back of the grid.
Regrettably bringing a team into this but it’s a notable example from recent years was Mercedes taking a fresh PU every 3 races with Lewis and Valterri. A much more highly strung engine that was more than the others and only receiving a 5 place drop each time a fresh one was taken isn’t really truly being penalised.
(I’m sure there is more detail in that scenario from 2021 but probably cause for a different discussion.)
If the penalty was the rear of the grid for the second over your allowance then I’m sure it would put a lot more teams off using ‘disposable’ components as it massively puts you on the back foot - rather than a 5 place drop.
Please - ‘don’t shoot the messenger’ with my examples - they were just what come to me at a quick thought - and remember we are discussing the penalties not being adequate or off putting enough rather than a specific offence and whether the FIA decision was correct for driver A or B or team A or B.