Pirelli's motorsport director Paul Hembery has repeated at Korea that F1's sole tyre suppliers need to have more relevant tyre testing if it is to develop solid and reliable tyres for the 2014 season.
Score one for Harris. Article 22 states, "any track running time not part of an Event undertaken by a competitor entered in the Championship." The event was not undertaken by a competitor; it was undertaken by Pirelli. Therefore Mercedes in not in breach.
Fine loophole that Sad if the FIA didnt realize that...
becouse everyone thought it was illegal with an '13 car and becouse of that pointless. but if it's legal now i can see teams crying for pirelli tests. this could put pirelli in some king makers position "merc helped us once so we'll ask them again to test for us. but red bull? they coused some serious bad press for us so no testing for red bull"
i'm not saying that this is how it will get, i'm just typing my thoughts
We cannot know if the point will stand. It all depends on how the test was set up. If Merc had their race engineers on site and they had some input to the testing they are truly guilty IMO. But if they fire walled Merc completely from involvement except for the drivers they could win the argument. So it all depends.
Last edited by WhiteBlue on 20 Jun 2013, 12:45, edited 1 time in total.
Formula One's fundamental ethos is about success coming to those with the most ingenious engineering and best ..............................organization, not to those with the biggest budget. (Dave Richards)
a very interesting turn. i thought they were screwed, but now it kinde looks like they could get away with that.
of course it sounds like that becouse harris interprets the rules his way and it's his job to make us say "uh, that sounds logical and i can't see why anything is wrong"
what the judges think of this is yet to be seen.
harris now brings up safety issues and shows an e-mail from FIA asking pirelli if the tires were safe for the canadian gp. hes building up the argument that not only merc was worried about safety, but also the FIA.
I doesn't look like a solid loophole anyway, more like a lawyer's talk. Involvement of F1 team, car and drivers makes it it this team's test as well.
I dont think it makes a Merc test, since Pirelli asked them, asked them for a relevant car, and asked them for drivers, nothing about the test was on Mercs own behalf and they didnt take any desicions regarding the test, more then saying yes or no to it.
Harris said: "Our position is if we are wrong on interpretation of what [article] 22 means and there was track running by us, such as we are in breach, it follows that Ferrari were also in breach.
"They ran their car on track and we argue their car followed substantially with the regulations... I put the marker down.
"It does not follow that if Ferrari runs on track a 2011 car, that that 2011 car does not confirm substantially to either the 2012 or 2013 regulations.
"There was only half [a second] difference between the 2011 cars and 2013 cars, showing the changes between 2011 and 2013 are minuscule in terms of performance."
Mercedes also revealed that Ferrari had another testing opportunity in 2012 with Pirelli, when Felipe Massa was used in its pre-Spanish Grand Prix test and that the team conducted more than 1000 kilometres.
Case looks a little less bleak. Still, this is an all or nothing attempt: if mercedes fails to convince the tribunal that it was a Pirelli test, then they have absolutely nothing. High risk in there, and it isn't very solid. The argument could go either way. Though the FIA very obviously did not prepare for that. And the talk about an unfair advantage is rubbish. It does not break a rule, except in the very far fetched case of article 151C, to have an advantage. Ferrari would btw be in the same boat then. That they were allowed to do so without complaint must act as precedence on that front. The FIA cannot hold on to that point.
Also note that article 151C holds the brunt of the biggest punishments. The punishment will be much lower, probably a fine, if mercedes gets convicted, but not on grounds of breaching that rule.
Last edited by turbof1 on 20 Jun 2013, 12:57, edited 1 time in total.