It shouldn't have to be down to the other teams to police it. The FIA should have known that Red Bulls suspension arms were angled at 20 degrees instead of 5 degrees. What if they set them to 6 or 7 degrees, video evidence wouldn't be enough for that but it's still an unfair advantage for the infringing team.Giblet wrote:Unequivocal video evidence should be enough, if a team challenges it.
This sport is supposed to a) be a sport, and b) represent the pinnacle of motor sport, yet we have teams being able to run illegal parts on their cars for the first third of the season and who are only stopped when another team notices the irregularity and complains.
And this is for a part of the car that all can see - just how good a job do you believe the FIA are doing in policing all the parts of the car hidden from view, such as a floor and internals of the car? If you can't trust the FIA over something as simple as measuring the angle of incidence of the suspension arms to within an accuracy of 15 degrees, then how can you put any faith in them to correctly enforce the more difficult things like deflection of the floor under aerodynamic load, or subtly adjustable suspension?
Ps. I'm not singling out Red Bull here, can't blame them for trying their luck although it's a bit rich from a team that has been so vocal criticising others such as McLaren for the F-duct and their diffuser. My gripe is 100% with the FIA for being too inept to even be able to enforce their own rules.