honestly, no such 'loop-hole' exists.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑08 Jan 2021, 02:02I was thinking on the edge of the regulations... There is a little clause in there about costs...
Ferrari could show that "Hey FIA, we homologated this new 2020/2021 nose, but we do not have the budget allocated to race it. We already spent money on fifteen copies of the old nose. We did not expect that we would be so behind aerodynamically. If we use the new nose in 2020 it will not work immediately and thus it will cost us additional resources to tweak the aerodynamics to get it to work not to mention the fifteen old noses will go to waste. Please allow us to continue using the old nose for the rest of 2020 so that we can save resources by making the new nose specifically to our 2021 design."
Don't think that will fly?
I think your mistaking what Homologation means. Teams have had to submit just one specification of each of the parts that were 'homologated' to the FIA, This basically means that that specification has been 'locked-in' - They must then use this single specification from the date stated (30 September 2020) until the end of the 2021 season
They can not change the specification of that part, or modify it in any way, and they can not revert back to an older specification previously raced by the team or previously designed by the team before 30/9/20 but not run
They must run the car in exactly the same specification as it was raced as of 30/9/20 (Mugello)
The only exception to this is the token system that allows teams to change just 1 element of the car that has been homologated. They can use this change to either introduce a new specification or revert back to a previous specification raced in the past