Nope, not Redbull's problem at all, the brief from the FIA was that it had to work in all F1 Cars, there is no onus on the teams to modify their cars to make the sensor work aside from specific install instructions (in the fuel tank after the fuel pumps etc).Pup wrote:But even if they did see inconsistencies, those weren't necessarily the fault of the fuel flow meters themselves. If the variations are due to interference from the car - electrical, ultrasonic, or otherwise - then it becomes Red Bull's problem to either fix the interference or accept that they have to run with a significant safety margin.
Other teams are seeing similar inconsistencies with the sensor as confirmed by AutoSport magazine, it's not isolated to Redbull.Pup wrote:Indeed, it's not inconceivable that it's their car that's causing the problems. We know that some of the variation in the units is due to interference, and there was a lot of discussion here early on that at least part of Red Bull's engine problems were caused by electrical interference. And if they have an interference issue that's either difficult to track down or to fix; and if the safety margin they have to use is significant; then it would make sense that they'd want to cause a fuss and hopefully get the units puled from competition. After all, the strategy worked for them last year with the tires.
I think it's very clear that the FIA did no real-world F1 testing and the teams did not run these FFM's at Jerez or Bahrain - if they had the FIA would not have changed the sampling spec from 10hz to 5hz on a race weekend!