SmallSoldier wrote: ↑20 Jan 2021, 00:29
diffuser wrote:mwillems wrote: ↑19 Jan 2021, 16:51
The .5 was just a random number to highlight how a big improvement in speed would make us a target.
I didn't know that all the changes are agreed, so does that mean that the chassis and the cooling and everything associated with it was finalised by September? Seems a bit early.
That's the way I understood the whole token thingy. Also if you go back to that interview with Key, he talks about the back and forth with the FIA over what they could and couldn't do. So that was the discussion over their proposed changes.
There were 3 dates that they had to comply with for different parts of the design, the last being in November, I think. I think the token was the first date , I beleive, and that was end of September (or there abouts).
Remember all the stuff about getting the nose out before then....They already knew what had to be done Before or not done at all.
The dates were intended to tell FIA how they were going to use the Tokens, they didn’t need to have finalized designs for it... The other cut off dates where for parts to be homologated (therefore wouldn’t need Tokens)
So, Mclaren could have still work on the “integration” of parts until as late as they could (considering production times)
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I could be wrong cause I'm no lawyer and you need one to understand the rules but that's what I understood.
https://the-race.com/formula-1/six-key- ... -answered/
WHEN CAN CHANGES BE MADE, AND HOW MANY?
Some homologated components have been afforded a value of one token, which means they can be updated twice.
Bigger components, such as inboard front and rear suspension, have been assigned a value of two tokens.
That means teams can only deploy one change in specification once the design is homologated.
Motor Racing Formula One Testing Test One Day 1 Barcelona, Spain
To use their tokens,
teams have to hit three deadlines, starting with the intent to modify a part with an estimate on which parts the change affects and a brief description of the reasons,
then providing a full specification of the changes and affected components, and
eventually producing a detailed scheme of the intended changes.
This process must be completed within two months of the end of the 2020 shutdown period for parts homologated by the first round, and within two months of the third round of the season for R8-2020 parts.
But the first deadline is so early that if teams want to use a token to change a homologated part, they need begin the process of informing the FIA several weeks before the homologation is even set.
And it means any changes intended to be made during the off-season, or in 2021, will need to be established well before the 2020 campaign has ended.