Budkowski. Not saying he is doing anything wrong even if it is from him, but he knows what FIA can find and what he suspects is happening.
I believe he’s referring to Marcin Budkowski.
Just a thought. Very striking is that last year Mercedes was able to tell how Ferrari managed to influence the sensors.zibby43 wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 20:59I just want to make it clear before I state this that I’m not alleging anything against Honda.
But to answer your question, no one really thought of the clever system Ferrari was using to circumvent the very official fuel flow measurement sensor. And that was also a very clear breach of the regs.
In other words, who the heck knows what’s going on with these PUs? Certainly not the FIA lol!
Not then, but he would have a good idea of what their capability is and what they would look for.
Did they know Ferrari influenced the sensors? I thought they just calculated the energy used at 'that' point was more than could be produced with the maximum allowed flow?Wouter wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 21:54Just a thought. Very striking is that last year Mercedes was able to tell how Ferrari managed to influence the sensors.zibby43 wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 20:59I just want to make it clear before I state this that I’m not alleging anything against Honda.
But to answer your question, no one really thought of the clever system Ferrari was using to circumvent the very official fuel flow measurement sensor. And that was also a very clear breach of the regs.
In other words, who the heck knows what’s going on with these PUs? Certainly not the FIA lol!
How did they know that? Maybe they did it themselves the same way with the ERS?
Would RB have filed a protest against Ferrari if they themselves did the same with the ERS?
Last year, Honda had a reasonable "party mode". This year, however, not anymore, because they have chosen to run the engine for longer at more power during the race.
Yes, they knew that and in what way and they told what they suspected / knew to RB and they then lodged a protest.Big Tea wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 22:00Did they know Ferrari influenced the sensors? I thought they just calculated the energy used at 'that' point was more than could be produced with the maximum allowed flow?Wouter wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 21:54Just a thought. Very striking is that last year Mercedes was able to tell how Ferrari managed to influence the sensors.zibby43 wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 20:59
I just want to make it clear before I state this that I’m not alleging anything against Honda.
But to answer your question, no one really thought of the clever system Ferrari was using to circumvent the very official fuel flow measurement sensor. And that was also a very clear breach of the regs.
In other words, who the heck knows what’s going on with these PUs? Certainly not the FIA lol!
How did they know that? Maybe they did it themselves the same way with the ERS?
Would RB have filed a protest against Ferrari if they themselves did the same with the ERS?
Last year, Honda had a reasonable "party mode". This year, however, not anymore, because they have chosen to run the engine for longer at more power during the race.
The alternative to being unable to enforce rules, is not to have them.( well, we must have some rules, but new ones)TNTHead wrote: ↑18 Aug 2020, 23:03I think Binotto is right, we need more transparency. Or a much simpler rule set/engine formula, then the grey area is much smaller and PU convergence is also easier to accomplish. Now its impossible to police.
What if the leading PU maker is ahead not by a clear breach but by exploiting not one part of performance found in the grey area but at multiple aspects?
Then its no wonder every PU maker has something which is not within the spirit of the rules because runner ups need to exploit those areas as well. I dont know this is the case (who knows?) but I would not be surprised when all four PU makers have something.
If so one should make it 1) legal or 2) forbid it clearly with an easy instrument to monitor.
To quote Walter Sobchak: 'Once a plan gets too complex, everything can go wrong'
Interesting times ahead!
They tried that with issuing their own ECU, but it soon slipped. It is as much a game of hide and seek as developing power.djones wrote: ↑19 Aug 2020, 11:23It's always sad to see this kind of clutching at straws in an attempt to slow the team down that has just done the best job. Unlike Ferrari (or any team that is not 1st) Mercedes have no reason to cheat. The damage to the brand would be substantial for them.
I don't know how true it is, but apparently, Mercedes did not even use the top engine modes and were still 0.8 faster in the last qualifying session. A big part of me hopes they bring the rule in and Mercedes is even faster than before (relative to the other teams).
If they want to make engines more 'equal' and remove any ways to cheat why don't they just say: Everybody uses the same fuel, coolant and oil brand and quantity at the start of the race and qual. And all use the same battery pack.