The Spirit of the Rule is a quite old notion and won´t change because of some F1 fan wants some "cheat towards victory" philosophy.hardingfv32 wrote:I say that the FIA and teams looks on this with admiration. 'Completely against the spirit', spirit of wanting to win? Where can I get an explanation of the correct FIA 'spirit' philosophy? I say 'spirit' can not be administrated unless it is written done somewhere in black and white.turbof1 wrote:It's not really declared "legal", only that it isn't "illigal". The FIA will be fed up with the fact it goes completely against the spirit of the rules and will push or a TD.
Brian
It is as simple as taking the law as a whole thing and searching its coherence. As many law compendiums have introductions and historical debates around them, it is written. You only have to read. If the FIA tells you that something is done to regulate some issue, and objectively it regulates that, you can pretty much disclose what the spirit of the rule is. Normally it's pretty "obvious" with public law, so imagine how easy it can become with specific technical regulations.
So yes, it's in black an white, and even in colorful capital letters if you want it like that.