Mamba wrote: ↑26 May 2018, 21:24
Phil wrote: ↑26 May 2018, 20:28
You are too hung up about what is fair or isnt. There was suspicion that Ferrari was getting more out of the battery than allowed. The competing teams [Mercedes & Co.] threatened to protest and wanted clarity. This lead to the FIA requesting changes at Ferrari to make sure that they could not get more out of the battery than allowed. Hence, now with those changes in place, they [the FIA] are confident everything is in order. This means whatever Ferrari was doing BEFORE those changes were made, can no longer be done.
There is good reason to believe that whatever Ferrari was doing with the battery, they stopped doing it after Baku (and before Barcelona). Now they definitely cant anymore. It may explain some of why their pace went away in Barcelona compared to the races before that.
Barcelona was down to the tyre changes and Ferrari not using theirs as well as Mercedes. Ferrari were only a tenth off pole in Barcelona using a harder tyre. That is tyre usage, not engine modes. Race was tyre deg which was much higher than RB or Merc.
Would the FIA not go further than a few code changes if blatant cheating was found? (Cue Ferrari International Assistance cries). If they had to monitor Mercedes or Renault they will probably ask for a few changes there too. Let us see in the next races if there is suddenly a drop or if Mercedes really have gone on a witch hunt which is the one I am more likely to believe.
Barcelona could be down to multiple reasons, not just tires. And about their pace in Q3 on the “harder tire” - it was the quicker tire throughout the weekend. Mercedes just got away not using it.
And about the battery, again:
1.) Ferrari might have found a way to bypass the 4MJ limit and FIA sensor to extract more.
2.) other teams got wind of it due to GPS data which raised suspicion.
3.) They wanted clarity, treathened with protest.
4.) FIA looked into it, but apparently it is too complicated to know exactly what is going on - in other words, they cant say for sure if Ferrari is breaching the rules or not, but they could be. Either way, they cant prove it.
5.) going forward and to counter protests, the FIA had Ferrari change something to ensure that the battery limit is/can no longer be breached/by-passed.
For all we know, it could be a second sensor that has been attached to the battery to ensure no (more) breaching is done.
What ever it is, Ferrari get to keep their fancy battery setup but it’s evidently more closely monitored to ensure compliant usage.
End result: everyone is satisfied and can now move forward. The question however remains (and the next races will probably show this) if Ferrari has lost some of that qualifying edge/boost because of it.