One of the allowed changes under parc fermé is pedal position (article 40 sporting regulations), albeit with permission from a technical delegate. Placing an access point where adjustments can be made in the pedal box would not draw any attention whatsoever.Vanja #66 wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 14:03It's a moot point. It's not an allowed procedure per rules and this is clear. Allegations of RB doing it come only from McLaren drivers, eager to force a non-issue as a discourse in my view. It's impossible to prove RB made these changes before and we'll see if there's a massive step-change in their performance, I highly doubt it. From german sources, it seems this change requires removal of some body panels from inside the cockpit and doing this would raise a lot of issues with anyone who sees it happening in Parc Ferme conditions. If there really was a device that is located inside the cockpit, we'd hear about it by now and it would have raised suspicion much soonerFittingMechanics wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 12:00Can we agree that being able to run two different setups in qualy and race is usually beneficial? We can speculate as much as we want and think how much it could help, but I think the basics of it are simple. If you are able to make a change in parc ferme, that is almost certainly an advantage (or at least opportunity for an advantage).
Maybe in some cases you don't need to make a change because it's perfect as is, but for things like ride height which are affected by the weight, I think it doesn't work that way.
Removal of panels could point toward the removal of the panel on top of the cockpit nose, which is typically the access panel for the pedal box. Therefore, I believe it is strategically placed and not a coincidence.
Ultimately, the effectiveness of it is beside the point when you are breaking the law to make changes. Obviously absolutely no evidence of that whatsoever, but if it were to have a noticeable effect I think that would show with a bigger discrepancy between their qualifying and race pace.