The question should rather be "why" should they try to figure it out? The drivers would still have to preempt the start and that's a very thin line - Bottas and Hamilton (Monza 2014) got away with it, Alonso started within 0.08s in Russia last year.
Trying to do that every race wouldn't be worth the risk given that the penalty for a false start is a drive through penalty afaik
I don't really buy the "teams might exploit it" argument tbh
Several years ago they made a (very) short distance radar with an accuracy of a micrometer.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2017, 18:18Does anyone have any knowledge about how accurate one can measure very small distances using radio frequencies?
It's the same for everyone. The article mentioned that all competitors agreed to that solution.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2017, 20:10It would be my pinion that a 'secret' arbitrary precision could lead to questions of fairness.
There's enough rules in F1 that are enforced with a lot of wiggle room (most of the non-technical ones), so we already have that situation.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2017, 20:10Does this type of officiating then start to flow into other rule sets… kind of a slippery slope situation.
The system has never failed - i wouldn't call that inadequate.hardingfv32 wrote: ↑12 Jul 2017, 20:10Since the FIA has not had many secret rules before… I wonder if this is just not a coverup of a inadequate start monitoring system.