Jip wrote: ↑02 Mar 2020, 15:08
kimetic wrote: ↑02 Mar 2020, 12:07
I think this has been quite a severe punishment for Ferrari - it's a big public humiliation after all. FIA didn't need to come out with an announcement, even if it was something of a compromise.
A 'severe punishment'? Ferrari got the smallest punishment possible, no points taken away and still no explanation about what was wrong with the engine.
Maybe nothing was wrong. FIA's statement has been quite neutral. Could be negative or positive. Depends on your opinion.
I'll wait for the season to start and then conclude from real on track performance, if they might have lost significant amount of power.
Towards the end of last season I already told that we'll have to wait until 2020 season unfolds before assessing the situation. A possibility is that Ferrari have hidden performance on purpose in the last couple of races. A little bit like Mercedes decided not to run the blown wheel hubs in 2018.
At the moment there are different articles going in both directions. On the one hand articles like that from AMuS claiming that Ferrari was cheating, needed to build a complete new engine complying with the rules (sounds very unlikely) and on top of that needs to "pay" as a punishment by supporting the FIA financially and technically in the future.
On the other hand, there are articles claiming that the situation was actually a win for Ferrari because Ferrari explained their way of how they interpret the rules, communicated this to the FIA (like Mercedes did with DAS) and that's how they eventually came to a settlement. Another article claimed that Ferrari's new PU has 15 more horses than last year's PU.
So it's a bit of a tricky situation right now. We'll have to wait and see with our own eyes what happens performance wise in the races before interpreting letters and jumping to definitive conclusions.