kris wrote:From what has been heard and said they did break a regulation. The rule was there for all to see, they just decided to ignore it or work around it. (We would have to wait for their appeal to see their version of the story.)
As per the rules, jumping a red light even though there is no traffic in sight would still entitle you to a ticket.
The thing I disagree with is when the rule was enforced/the check was made. These kinds of things should be checked prior to the race, not after wards. weight? Fuel? Those are issues that can be manipulated in the race and therefore need to be checked. This was nothing like either of those things. The potentially disturbing part of it is how they came to make the check, who's cars they checked, and whether any other team had "suggested" they check it.
With all this compliance checking was Hamilton's tea tray looked at? If so did it magically not wear the regulation plank those few millimeters it takes to disqualify him? NOTE: As far as I remember the regulation plank rule was only enforced once, shortly after it's passing and on Michael Schumacher after he spun backwards over high curbing in the race.
I believe we're looking at a case of selective enforcement here but hopefully the light of day will show us how this event unfolded.
Then there is the issue of the penalty .. that of instant disqualification rather than some other penalty like a 10 spot grid penalty or something else. Changing the results after the race was run is not good for the fans or the sanctioning body and should be avoided if at all possible IMO.