zjeeraar wrote:Juzh wrote:No, you can only have 1 homologated PU spec at a time, and there's no point to re-homologate an old, worse spec. Best course of action is to apply updates once the current spec has served it proportional part of the season.
I thought the engines were not homologated at this stage, this was the loophole that gave the opportunity to use tokens in-season. The FIA failed to set a date for homologation of the engines in 2015, which is why they currently race un-homologated engines with tokens yet to spend...
Juzh is right in principle: by the letter of the rule you can only run one homologated engine.
However, with the loophole in the rules allowing updates throughout the season, teams have been given dispensation. After all, using those updates require a new PU component allocation. Say that at the moment of updating Sauber has done 5 races with its current allocation, Ferrari did only 2 races and Marussia only 1. For Sauber, the timing is spot on to introduce a new allocation with the updates, but Ferrari will have to throw out the old allocation, and never be able to use it again, and Marussia will not even be able to fit it due a non-compatible chassis.
So a Technical Directive was made to drop that rule in reality. In our example Sauber can use the updates straight away, Ferrari will either keep running its older allocation for 3 more races, or effectively introduce a new allocation with updates right away, and reuse the old spec in 3 races later on in the season, and Marussia will stay with the 2014 spec until it has a chassis that fits the new PU.
You can run whatever you wish as long it was homologated. This also means you can homologate as much as you want during the 2015 year.