WilliamsF1 wrote:Definitely a lot of work but it is choice that teams have to make, stick with Renault and wait 6 months or entire season before a full fix is available or jump ship, spend a few million and 2 months to get another engine going.
It is a lot of work because turbo sits between the engine and gearbox and there are a lot of ERS components which will be of different sizes and may require different locations.
What choice, what 6 months, what entire season, what change of customers, is it a fact now? Based on "someone said" let's discuss it as reality. OK, hypothetically. Can they? I don't know, I haven't read their contract. Will they be "forced to" - OK, how, by redesigning (?) the whole car and why especially after 6 months or full season? And I thought technical should mean not only naming car's parts but basing discussions on material world, even when predicting sth.
On top of that cherry picked quotes in every second post from the same interview. Yes, they are in "serious" trouble, proof is on track, interviews are secondary and for details but if interview does not correlate with blog's predictions it doesn't matter. Let's say it's 20 weeks for "full fix", fine even if it's too specific considering "various" problems and chassis side from different teams - how about "not fully fixed", like 95%? Possible, when?
mikeerfol wrote:
So, Renault to have unequal treatment?
It would only be unequal if they'd be the only team allowed to modify, wouldn't it?
Same interview
:
"The homologation deadline is the end of February and is fundamental to regulations. Beyond that time, changes are permitted only with prior approval from the FIA. Change is not forbidden, but subject to the sporting regulations and we should not get so hung up on this date."
Previously (engine freeze of V8s) and unofficially AFAIR the logic of allowing reliability updates was based on "it can happen to you too". Teams could veto but didn't because of that. I don't know if it's up to other teams still or only FIA.