And Toro Rosso's nose is even higher. What is your point there? The finger nose is a complete different solution. The Sabretooth solution on the other hand removes the obstruction in the middle.beelsebob wrote:I'm not convinced that it's higher than the FIA require. What makes you think it is? What loophole do you think they're exploiting to do so?turbof1 wrote:The spirit of the rules is what the FIA intends to do with the rules. Clearly this isn't conforming to that: the nose is higher then intended, with a lot of potentional to go much higher (as in lotus high). This isn't what the FIA wanted. At all.beelsebob wrote:I actually don't understand why people are saying this is against the spirit of the rules... It's a low nose, that's what the FIA were trying to achieve, so that's absolutely within the spirit. Other than that, it's clearly the most beautiful interpretation, and also I expect the interpretation the FIA expected people to take.
What do you think is not spirit-worthy about it?
Just to be clear: I have nothing against breaking the spirit rules down. It's another thing that makes F1 exciting: the technology to bend around the rules. I really love it. The part where I am having a problem refers to the FIA having no spine: they have all these intentions but just fail to enforce them. A governing body that has no authority with nobody else to blame then itself, there is nothing more sickening then that.
The Red Bull's tip actually looks higher than the Merc's, I'm really not convinced there's any rule bending going on here.
Both scarbs and Matt Somers agree the nose is higher then the FIA require, but the structural nosetip is integrated into one of pylons.
Maybe this drawing helps:
The ferrari nose actually represents the highest point the nosetip can go without bending rules.