djones wrote: ↑03 Nov 2019, 18:54
zibby43 wrote: ↑03 Nov 2019, 18:50
djones wrote: ↑03 Nov 2019, 18:49
One thing I don't understand is how Ferrari would suddenly stop using the system (if indeed they have a system).
Once a clarification has been asked for does that mean the FIA check this on every car?
Surely there would have to be some direct protest or something towards Ferrari and a simple clarification does not warrant a knee jerk?
It means if you get caught with the system after the Directive is issued, you're disqualified.
So the FIA could have already known about it, but won't act until another team asks for clarification? (because there was currently no specific rule against it)
The way I understood it, particularly after it was explained in this piece, was that the method Red Bull asked for clarification about operated within a sort of a gray zone.
https://www.motorsportweek.com/joesaward/id/00577
It's a gray area because of the *means* used to achieve the end goal to circumvent fuel flow measurements. And what I mean by gray zone is that, while the end result is illegal, it's pretty clear the FIA had no idea this could even be done with the method specified by Red Bull, so even if it was already illegal for years, it didn't matter, because the FIA was completely clueless as to what to look for, and have no way of knowing if it had already been done by any teams before the Directive.
I mean, we're talking about the FIA here. The same outfit that missed Renault's brake bias system for literal years.