I think AMuS is wrong regarding completely rebuilding the PU. Hypothesizing on fooling the fuel flow sensor and running a higher fuel flow for these fractions of moments, it doesn't seem to be critical towards the function and reliability of the power unit, and thus taking that away should not brick the power unit. It can only take some performance away, which Ferrari could have clawed back by significant changes on the PU.
Also what Stivala said, is technically true, but not relevant. This issue does not include other parties. It is about Ferrari and the FIA, and only about them.
tnajner wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 17:57
saviour stivala wrote: ↑29 Feb 2020, 13:00
Why is it a wrong assumption to assume the FERRARI engine was legal as regards the maximum fuel flow rules when it was the only one out of the four on the grid that was never been caught breaching said rules?.
You are right, I quckly read through your reply. It is obviously correct to assume that Ferrari engine was legal because It did not breach any of FF limits.
I'm not jumping automatically to conclusions here, but circumventing the fuel flow sensor can very much be considered illegal:
5.10.5: Any device, system or procedure the purpose and/or effect of which is to increase the flow rate or to store and recycle fuel after the measurement point is prohibited.
That's pretty much covering all aspects of increasing fuel flow above what is allowed.