It's utterly irrelevant. Front wings aren't under scrutiny by the FIA at the moment.
It's possible, not denying it. Just saw the tweets being shared in the RBR topics and no one even cared to question it'sSieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 18:24This is very weak arguing. [...]
it is also obvious the merc FW is also much more moveable, if you care to admit it or not. That is also an advantage and if Merc is really threatening to go to court for an already very short grace period I feel redbull would be wise to repay the favour. Let the judge decide if and what is within the current rules and the spirit of the rules. I hope it won’t come down to that. Just one more race with the currently valid limits.
I agree with you, but the problem for the teams with flexi wings is that there is precedence that even if a wing passes the static test it can still be ruled illegal... I was trying to find the notes on the Stewards decision for Abu Dhabi 2014 to confirm, but the Red Bull front wing ruling is not much different in essence to what is happening in this situation.214270 wrote:Yes, but this is my point. Unless the regs/testing which apply to the front wing changes, there are no grounds to challenge. The front wing passes the tests and has been deemed legal. Unless there is a reg change before the next race, the same rules apply. The rear wing can now be protested only because there has been new clarification. At which point the rear wing can be tested against the new rules.Sieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 17:50It is. But it is also ultimately the same case. The 3mm move under stress was allowed as the limit for the RW. And all wings were moving. It was just when a few wings were deemed to move excessively (no longer within the spirit of the rules) that the FIA agreed to make the test limit more strict. But, when the FIA feels some front wings are deemed to move excessively (as compared to others) they might introduce tests, and limits just the same. It is harder as there is no predescribed test yet, but ultimately the same factors are in play. Do we feel what some teams are doing is excessive, enough to warrant stricter regulation.
It is why mercedes have threatened to go to ICA, not because RBR is not in compliance (they are) but because they are not following the spirit of the rules.
That’s the jump off point - New regs/testing.
https://www.skysports.com/amp/f1/news/1 ... r-is-legal214270 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 18:34Well that’s not how I understand it, I could be wrong through. As far as I’m aware new rules are in force. Testing/compliance of new rules however will remain as previous until the French GP, that is the core of Wolff’s position.peaty wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 18:29but it won't be apply until the french gp?. Even at that point teams will have a 20% tolerance for a month I believe. That's why, in theory, there are not grounds to challenge. If the protest is accepted, as explained by others, RBR will protest as well.214270 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 18:21
Yes, but this is my point. Unless the regs/testing which apply to the front wing changes, there are no grounds to challenge. The front wing passes the tests and has been deemed legal. Unless there is a reg change before the next race, the same rules apply. The rear wing can now be protested only because there has been new clarification.
That’s the jump off point - New regs/testing.
I don’t think this quite applies though. The flex in that case was engineered in. That doesn’t appear to be the case here.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:10I agree with you, but the problem for the teams with flexi wings is that there is precedence that even if a wing passes the static test it can still be ruled illegal... I was trying to find the notes on the Stewards decision for Abu Dhabi 2014 to confirm, but the Red Bull front wing ruling is not much different in essence to what is happening in this situation.214270 wrote:Yes, but this is my point. Unless the regs/testing which apply to the front wing changes, there are no grounds to challenge. The front wing passes the tests and has been deemed legal. Unless there is a reg change before the next race, the same rules apply. The rear wing can now be protested only because there has been new clarification. At which point the rear wing can be tested against the new rules.Sieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 17:50
It is. But it is also ultimately the same case. The 3mm move under stress was allowed as the limit for the RW. And all wings were moving. It was just when a few wings were deemed to move excessively (no longer within the spirit of the rules) that the FIA agreed to make the test limit more strict. But, when the FIA feels some front wings are deemed to move excessively (as compared to others) they might introduce tests, and limits just the same. It is harder as there is no predescribed test yet, but ultimately the same factors are in play. Do we feel what some teams are doing is excessive, enough to warrant stricter regulation.
It is why mercedes have threatened to go to ICA, not because RBR is not in compliance (they are) but because they are not following the spirit of the rules.
That’s the jump off point - New regs/testing.
The Front Wings of the RB10 passed all the static load tests, nevertheless after video footage of the wings flexing under load (same situation as now), further inspection found them to have been designed to flex and therefore ruled illegal... In that particular case they used a type of spring mechanism on the adjusters, but conceptually is no different than using carbon layup to flex the wing under load beyond what test measures.
I’m sure that the precedent above will be a part of a potential Protest by those that have wings not under scrutiny.
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The camera’s are a real help to keep the playing field level. I have (see RBR team thread) also actively resisted people making the point the rake is a factor in the RBR RW moving on camera. It tilts at the same rate with the whole car so that can’t explain it.RZS10 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:05It's possible, not denying it. Just saw the tweets being shared in the RBR topics and no one even cared to question it'sSieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 18:24This is very weak arguing. [...]
it is also obvious the merc FW is also much more moveable, if you care to admit it or not. That is also an advantage and if Merc is really threatening to go to court for an already very short grace period I feel redbull would be wise to repay the favour. Let the judge decide if and what is within the current rules and the spirit of the rules. I hope it won’t come down to that. Just one more race with the currently valid limits.
accuracy because it's confirming what many want to see/believe.
That comparison however doesn't hold up well under scrutiny, the actual arguments for that were in the previous post - the camera distance, angle, wingshape etc all play a role.
I thought about drawing something to show this but all one has to do is hold two fingers in front of the eyes and then twist the hand or change the angle or the distance of the hand - the observable distance between the fingertips will change drastically, especially when having something next to the hand as reference (like a grid).
Compare how much one can see of the neutral section in the middle of the wing, that section seemingly varies in size/span, right? That means the camera is looking at it from a different distance or angle. That alone makes it really hard to make any definitve conclusions based on that footage, apart from: those wings move a lot.
I even tried to somehow align the wings properly but i failed miserably.
As i wrote, not saying that what the comparison supposedly shows def. isn't the case, technically it could even exaggerate the flexing on RBR's wing compared to Merc (which would mean that Merc's wing moves even more), but i wouldn't even bet one $ on either of the wings moving more based on it. That's just it.
And about the video monitoring, it kinda makes me believe that none of the teams will go overboard with their flexing because of it.
The rules have not been changed. Just the limits stipulated for the existing test. Or have they?214270 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:18https://www.skysports.com/amp/f1/news/1 ... r-is-legal
I still can’t find where it says both rules & testing are being delayed till France vs just the testing being delayed. If it is just the testing, then it’s quite significant as these periods would apply:
Previous rules - previous testing
New rules - previous testing
New rules - new testing
If it goes to ICA which would require preparation time, I suspect the legal argument would be which should apply at the time of tribunal.
Video evidence of everyone's front wings flexing at speed has been around for years.
For some reason I thought both were changed and just the test implementation delayed. I’m gonna fall back from this thread as I have a sore head, lolSieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:29The rules have not been changed. Just the limits stipulated for the existing test. Or have they?214270 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:18https://www.skysports.com/amp/f1/news/1 ... r-is-legal
I still can’t find where it says both rules & testing are being delayed till France vs just the testing being delayed. If it is just the testing, then it’s quite significant as these periods would apply:
Previous rules - previous testing
New rules - previous testing
New rules - new testing
If it goes to ICA which would require preparation time, I suspect the legal argument would be which should apply at the time of tribunal.
I don’t think this quite applies though. The flex in that case was engineered in. That doesn’t appear to be the case here.
I have the exact same, have a nice coffee and enjoy your evening!214270 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:35For some reason I thought both were changed and just the test implementation delayed. I’m gonna fall back from this thread as I have a sore head, lolSieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:29The rules have not been changed. Just the limits stipulated for the existing test. Or have they?214270 wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:18
https://www.skysports.com/amp/f1/news/1 ... r-is-legal
I still can’t find where it says both rules & testing are being delayed till France vs just the testing being delayed. If it is just the testing, then it’s quite significant as these periods would apply:
Previous rules - previous testing
New rules - previous testing
New rules - new testing
If it goes to ICA which would require preparation time, I suspect the legal argument would be which should apply at the time of tribunal.
Carry on everyone.
The flex isn’t “engineered in” this time? I’m afraid that’s not the case... It most definitely is designed to do so... It has even been admitted by Binotto already... It’s the same scenario.214270 wrote:I don’t think this quite applies though. The flex in that case was engineered in. That doesn’t appear to be the case here.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:10I agree with you, but the problem for the teams with flexi wings is that there is precedence that even if a wing passes the static test it can still be ruled illegal... I was trying to find the notes on the Stewards decision for Abu Dhabi 2014 to confirm, but the Red Bull front wing ruling is not much different in essence to what is happening in this situation.214270 wrote: Yes, but this is my point. Unless the regs/testing which apply to the front wing changes, there are no grounds to challenge. The front wing passes the tests and has been deemed legal. Unless there is a reg change before the next race, the same rules apply. The rear wing can now be protested only because there has been new clarification. At which point the rear wing can be tested against the new rules.
That’s the jump off point - New regs/testing.
The Front Wings of the RB10 passed all the static load tests, nevertheless after video footage of the wings flexing under load (same situation as now), further inspection found them to have been designed to flex and therefore ruled illegal... In that particular case they used a type of spring mechanism on the adjusters, but conceptually is no different than using carbon layup to flex the wing under load beyond what test measures.
I’m sure that the precedent above will be a part of a potential Protest by those that have wings not under scrutiny.
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Sieper wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 19:38I have the exact same, have a nice coffee and enjoy your evening!
I'm gonna be very interested to see how this plays out. RBR, as you've pointed out, seemed to be heading to making this about "everything" flexing, not just about the rear wing flexing and the Merc FW flexs.trinidefender wrote: ↑26 May 2021, 17:56That's the entire issue with this whole argument. There are two parts to the regulations. One objective and one subjective.
The objective rule is a load test that is applied to various parts of the car such as the front and back wing. The subjective rule is that all external surfaces must remain static and immovable (whatever the hell that means ).
All cars racing now have passed the rear wing load tests and should be/are currently declared legal. Mercedes is arguing that Red Bulls rear wing visibly flexes ergo it violates the immovable surface rule.
The issue is that if you set that precedent then Mercedes are also violating this rule as their rear wing also visibly flexes.
The front wings are the same, it's hard to judge by how much but it does appear from the camera shots that mercedes front wing flexes more than the Red Bull front wing.
If Red Bull's car subsequently gets declared illegal through Mercedes court action that they are threatening to do then Red Bull will simply turn around and make their own court appeal against Mercedes front wing and the same penalty should be applied to Mercedes as the legal precedent will have been set.
This entire thing will become a tit for tat and Toto Wolf will look like a right a** hole for starting it.
The only logical way to move forward is for the FIA to change its load tests. If the the Red Bull passes the more stringent load tests but is shown to flex on camera then so be it, the car should be declared legal