basti313 wrote: ↑13 Aug 2020, 17:20
El Scorchio wrote: ↑13 Aug 2020, 16:37
basti313 wrote: ↑13 Aug 2020, 16:30
Regarding Williams, yes, I also think it is more than the engine and their car is so crappy that even the best engine does not help. Now they got across Haas and Alpha who have better cars, but a bad engine.
Regarding Ferrari: I think it is good to level the engines now. We are running into a token system, even more restricted engine development. It does not make sense to cement the old development benefits.
It's not Williams' fault that Haas and Alpha are paying the price for their engine supplier getting caught out doing something they shouldn't have. Why should they be punished themselves because of it? They now have a better engine. Good luck to them. They've suffered enough over the last few years haven't they?
I think it's only good to level the engine NOW if you're looking at it from Ferrari's point of view rather than an objective point of view. Why not last year when Ferrari were fastest and taking a string of poles with their extra power?
If you look at it another way it absolutely makes sense to cement the old developments benefits so they actually serve a punishment for what they did, and now have to try extra hard to catch up. Again, it's no-one else's fault they got caught out doing something they shouldn't so why should everyone else have to neuter themselves and dance to Ferrari's tune just because they are suffering the consequences?
Well, Ferrari was caught with tricks that the FIA could not police...so with multiple TDs the tricks were banned middle of the season or weren't they?
Now we assume that the Q modes are also not really what the rules intend as from one point they trick the limits and on the other point spoil driver input. So where is the difference?
With engine modes and overtake button banned we might come back to a point where the driver really drives "unaided" and is not guided through the lap corner by corner which engine mode to use. Please see the last lap from Lando Norris in Austria, how ridiculous this is. For me this is clearly against the rule but the current normal...
But this is different. There hasn't been loads of talk and suspicion for months of any one cheating in the way Ferrari seemed to be last year. No parts have been requested for inspection etc. etc. Merc's quali mode is in no way a new thing, whereas Ferrari's pace jump was very sudden in the middle of a season and just in specific circumstances or parts of the track.
With engine modes and overtake button banned, we could come to a situation where no-one can overtake anyone, so it might make things even more uncompetitive and extremely dull to watch all through the field of 20. I don't have a strong feeling one way or another about drivers getting guidance or not but it's already been shown a blanket ban on it is not realistic.
The more I think about the timing of this, it just seems to be something done in order to specifically aid Ferrari and their customers, I am afraid, which for me casts a really dark cloud over the integrity of the sport- again. Reading the below from a news story on Racefans only makes me feel that even more.
Ferrari drivers say ‘quali mode’ ban “can only be positive” for them
2020 Spanish Grand PrixPosted on
13th August 2020, 16:11 | Written by Keith Collantine
The Ferrari drivers say the FIA’s planned ban on high-performance qualifying engine modes won’t affect them but could present problems for their rivals.
As RaceFans revealed yesterday, the sport’s governing body intends to force teams to use the same engine modes in qualifying and the race. They hope to enforce the restriction from the next round of the championship at Spa-Francorchamps.
Charles Leclerc said the restriction can only help Ferrari.
“To be honest I don’t think it will affect us so much, so I think it can only be positive for us,” he said.
“How much it will be beneficial it’s still to see. But for us I can say that we don’t have anything different from quali to the race so for us I don’t think it will change anything.”
Sebastian Vettel agreed the restriction is more likely to affect Ferrari’s rivals.
“As Charles says it doesn’t affect us this season so let’s wait and see what happens,” he said. “I think it always depends what you are able to pull off.
“I guess if you have something developed on your engine that you can normally run a certain amount of mileage with more power or more stress on the engine it’s probably not the best news. But from where we are right now as Charles says it doesn’t affect us.”