Schumix wrote: ↑04 Mar 2020, 18:48
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑04 Mar 2020, 18:09
Schumix wrote: ↑04 Mar 2020, 17:51
Nobody is stupid in this political big fight story: the other teams are trying to understand what Ferrari is doing with his PU in order to copy it. This is F1 and things have always been like this. But I am sure 100% that the FIA will not reveal Ferrari trick.
More likely hoping to have it outlawed and thus prevent a spending spree.
Or even to make the FIA admit that Ferrari cheated, and thus should be thrown out of 2019's results and the lower teams get to have more prize money instead.
Lots of reasons why the other teams want to know what the agreement is and why it's all being kept hidden.
The fact that it's being hidden is enough to get people interested - that's not politics, that's human nature.
First, when the FIA finds something illegal, he issues a Technical Directive to all the teams clearly stating what is illegal.
In the second hand, and according to you, the FIA is supposed to communicate to the other teams the secrets of Ferrari PU?
It is clear that the FIA press release is not well writed. But there is not only interpretations of that press release which lead to suspect that Ferrari is cheating. There are other possible interpretations which indicate that Ferrari PU is legal. And we will find out the truth (Ferrari PU maximum output) very soon
The FIA do not issue a technical directive if they find something illegal. If it's illegal by the current rules it's in the current rules thus a change via a technical directive is entirely unnecessary.
Technical directives are added when either the FIA find something illegal that isn't strictly 100% illegal in the rules and they want to make it clear or if it's something that really is legal but isn't supposed to be so they change the rules more significantly to make it illegal.
When someone is found to be breaking the fuel flow limit they don't release a technical directive telling people not to break the fuel flow, that's in the rules. The one time you don't release a technical directive is specifically when someone is flat out breaking the rules obviously in a way that is completely covered within the rules.
When someone breaks the rules in a grey area or through a loophole we either get the FIA ban it pretty much immediately with a technical directive or we get a rule change for the following year. If someone isn't breaking the rules.. that's it, no directive, no fine, no settlement, no reason to do anything. If someone isn't breaking the rules they aren't breaking the rules, everyone moves on.
Somehow Ferrari got investigated heavily then had to come to a secretive settlement.