When we talk about the fuel flow limit, we necessarily talk about spikes, not long term averages. I'm no expert on the issue, but I gather that this indeed does make a difference. Being able to have sub-second bursts in power can make a performance difference if the engine mapping makes smart use of it. But regarding reliability, it can also make a difference. Maybe the Red Bull engine mapping needs a certain amount of fuel flow at a certain stage and if less is injected, the software runs into errors, going into safe mode or whatever. Even if that only happens once per lap, it could be fatal.turbof1 wrote:It's thought-out and reasonably argued, but forgets a very critical part: you only have 100kg. You can't run 100kg/h or higher the whole race, so ricciardo eventually had to lower the fuel flow. The fact, yes that is a fact, that he did and didn't result in a DNF means it defeats the argument.thomin wrote:Well, we have heard from Red Bull that Vettel's problems in qualifying stemmed from a Software change that was made necessary in order conform with FIA fuel flow numbers. Ricciardo didn't have that constraint as he ran a faulty fuel flow meter (FFM) on Saturday, so the FIA allowed Red Bull to go to their fallback fuel monitoring method.
So I think it does sound reasonable that Red Bull may have lacked the experience with the engine in order to adapt the software on the fly.
While this ultimately comes down to speculation, I do believe that Red Bull couldn't run the Renault engine with the specs the FIA demanded. They tried it with Vettel and failed. With Ricciardo they ran the illegal spec, hoping to be able to get away with it after all the back and forth regarding the FFM on his car. When the FIA contacted Red Bull during the race, in order to warn them, Vettel was already out of the race and they suspected that Ricciardo would suffer the same fate, should they bow down. So they took their chances, having nothing to lose.
Again, pure speculation, but it fits in neatly with all the info we have.
And again, Red Bull themselves said on Saturday that the software problems on Vettel's car came after they adjusted it according to the FIA's demands.