djones wrote: ↑24 May 2018, 13:47
The FIA and the teams are all part of the same organisation. It is not in any parties interest to make public information which has anybody look bad. And rightly so.
We will never know what Ferrari did and we will never know how it was stopped.
What will will know, is how much this affects them on track by their pace.
And in terms of the oil burn stuff and talk of using the turbo. Again we will never know, but if it all of a sudden stops smoking, its probably safe to say they were doing something that was illegal and has now stopped.
All in all, lets see the speed of the car, especially in Q3. And I also mean over the coming races, we can't base any pace change on one (especially Monaco).
No, the FIA needs to be transparent so that rumours don't take wing.
As far as I'm concerned, the story of some sort of gadget fixed to the Ferrari to check electrical power output is a mere rumour, because it has not come from an official source. It is the same for the oil burning stories.
The most authoritative news about Ferrari's battery configuration has come from Niki Lauda's complaint that the FIA takes too long to investigate issues; to Mercedes fans, this gives teeth to claims of illegality by Ferrari, even though there has been no official word. It is unprofessional for the FIA to allow things like this to happen.
F1 still has the old boy, smoke filled tobacco room, part my back, I part yours image from the Max Mosly-Bernnie Ecclestone era. Its really unfortunate.