Their timing was perfect too
What does this relate to?
Suspension systems that increased aerodynamic performance were not allowed. Ferrari suspected Mercedes and RBR of having built such suspensions and wanted clarification.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑12 May 2018, 13:04Just like the suspension systems last year, eh? Ferrari jealousy knew no bounds...
Yes, the winglet is banned because although Ferrari insist it's part of the mirror's mounting, it's obviously purely an aerodynamic device. The FIA have stamped on this area before it becomes part of an arms race between the teams. That is sensible.
It's never sensible to change published rules mid season. Never.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑12 May 2018, 15:50Yes, the winglet is banned because although Ferrari insist it's part of the mirror's mounting, it's obviously purely an aerodynamic device. The FIA have stamped on this area before it becomes part of an arms race between the teams. That is sensible.
The key will be to see if Ferrari mount the mirrors on the halo next race or not.
Indeed so. Changing the rules mid season to allow mirrors on the halo was wrong to start with. The FIA isn't making it worse by clarifying exactly what is allowed now.Zynerji wrote: ↑12 May 2018, 16:19It's never sensible to change published rules mid season. Never.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑12 May 2018, 15:50Yes, the winglet is banned because although Ferrari insist it's part of the mirror's mounting, it's obviously purely an aerodynamic device. The FIA have stamped on this area before it becomes part of an arms race between the teams. That is sensible.
The key will be to see if Ferrari mount the mirrors on the halo next race or not.
That's not a formula, that's a child's game.
Moving the mirror mounts out of line-of-sight would help visibility, that much is true. The extra fin above the mirror was obviously a pure aero device. Perhaps there is also concern within FIA about mounting larger structures to the halo.