Also the sidepods does not seem to appear of having a lower leading lip. Instead it is just a -P- sidepod with parallel lips.
FIA gave those the green light, then changed their mind. Then made them legal the year after.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 14:05Sure they do.
https://d3cm515ijfiu6w.cloudfront.net/w ... anetf1.jpg
Some would call it clever. But I guess it depends what team you support as to whether it's genius or not.
Because these things are not set in stone always. The FIA may give you a tentative "there's nothing 100% obviously illegal here" and then change their minds when other teams start protesting and giving their interpretation of the rules. Much of F1 is about teams policing each other's solutions. So clearing the FIA bar is just the first step of bringing a grey area part to the track.Matt2725 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:38FIA gave those the green light, then changed their mind. Then made them legal the year after.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 14:05Sure they do.
https://d3cm515ijfiu6w.cloudfront.net/w ... anetf1.jpg
Remember DAS? It flew.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:51Because these things are not set in stone always. The FIA may give you a tentative "there's nothing 100% obviously illegal here" and then change their minds when other teams start protesting and giving their interpretation of the rules. Much of F1 is about teams policing each other's solutions. So clearing the FIA bar is just the first step of bringing a grey area part to the track.Matt2725 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:38FIA gave those the green light, then changed their mind. Then made them legal the year after.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 14:05
Sure they do.
https://d3cm515ijfiu6w.cloudfront.net/w ... anetf1.jpg
I don't see them in a period of cost caps, taking that risk, financially alone.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:51Because these things are not set in stone always. The FIA may give you a tentative "there's nothing 100% obviously illegal here" and then change their minds when other teams start protesting and giving their interpretation of the rules. Much of F1 is about teams policing each other's solutions. So clearing the FIA bar is just the first step of bringing a grey area part to the track.Matt2725 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:38FIA gave those the green light, then changed their mind. Then made them legal the year after.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 14:05
Sure they do.
https://d3cm515ijfiu6w.cloudfront.net/w ... anetf1.jpg
DAS got banned. If they didn't have a problem with it they could've kept it for 2021. No matter, I can provide you a laundry list of TD changes that have come in-season too.NoDivergence wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:59Remember DAS? It flew.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:51Because these things are not set in stone always. The FIA may give you a tentative "there's nothing 100% obviously illegal here" and then change their minds when other teams start protesting and giving their interpretation of the rules. Much of F1 is about teams policing each other's solutions. So clearing the FIA bar is just the first step of bringing a grey area part to the track.
This isn't a grey area. This follows the rules exactly to the letter as spelled. It's exactly the same interpretation as legality panels.
Intent should play no role in these questions, you make the ruleset correctly or you ban it the next year
What's unique about it? We have seen most of it in the past. There is nothing novel.NoDivergence wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 16:03This is the most unique car on the grid and it looks like an actual racecar compared to last year's forward cockpit chassis.
Hope they can put on performance fast
If you want to catch up you need to take risks. They may have a plan B, this may be perfectly legal, it may be a diversion. We'll see.Matt2725 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 16:01I don't see them in a period of cost caps, taking that risk, financially alone.Cs98 wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 15:51Because these things are not set in stone always. The FIA may give you a tentative "there's nothing 100% obviously illegal here" and then change their minds when other teams start protesting and giving their interpretation of the rules. Much of F1 is about teams policing each other's solutions. So clearing the FIA bar is just the first step of bringing a grey area part to the track.
The FW is novel, other than that it's quite reminiscient of cars we've already seen be launched.Rikhart wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 16:06What's unique about it? We have seen most of it in the past. There is nothing novel.NoDivergence wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 16:03This is the most unique car on the grid and it looks like an actual racecar compared to last year's forward cockpit chassis.
Hope they can put on performance fast
The first thing I thought of.organic wrote: ↑14 Feb 2024, 12:30Front wing reminds me of the 2023 Alfa Romeo
https://storage.googleapis.com/the-race ... -aus-1.jpg