Well... If you let go the steering wheel, you do not steer/control the direction of the wehicle.sucof wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 17:28Steering is not defined. However, it can be argued that steering means changing the direction of a moving car, and that it does not mean anything else. IF that is true, then what they are doing is not steering.JordanMugen wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 17:13The question is: is steering defined as making the car change direction?
As far as I can see steering is only defined as changing the toe angle(s) of no more than two wheels.
Under Article 1: Defintion, neither steering wheel nor steering are defined. Instead land vehicle is defined with this statement...
ARTICLE 1: DEFINITIONS 1.1 Formula One Car : An automobile designed solely for speed races on circuits or closed courses. 1.2 Automobile : A land vehicle running on at least four non‐aligned complete wheels, of which at least two are used for steering and at least two for propulsion. 1.3 Land vehicle : A locomotive device propelled by its own means, moving by constantly taking real support on the earth's surface, of which the propulsion and steering are under the control of a driver aboard the vehicle. ARTICLE 10 : SUSPENSION AND STEERING SYSTEMS 10.4 Steering : 10.4.1 Any steering system which permits the re‐alignment of more than two wheels is not permitted.https://www.fia.com/file/78015/download/26184
The driver is indeed in control of the Mercedes DAS system, so it seems to comply IMO. At least two wheels are used for steering, so that complies. No more than two wheels are used for steering, so that also complies.
Legally, this would be very easy to argue.
If you are holding the steering wheel you do steer/control the direction even in a straigt line.
Sorry for bad english...