AR3-GP wrote: ↑21 Nov 2024, 11:58
It's not a "nothingburger" either because teams have to make changes. If you have found a way to reduce plank wear and you no longer can use this, there will be consequences to ride height and performance.
There's no magic material that outright prevents any wear and tear on the plank. If there was, teams would already have been using it and FIA would have subsequently banned it of course
Other than using slightly harder materials where they can (still not sure, but this seems to be one of the things declared illegal now), they can play around with flexible materials and bushings between bolts, skid blocks, plank and chassis. Effects of this are very limited and there have been several interventions to prevent loophole exploitations
These changes now will have a small and 99% immeasurable effects. They won't be seen due to typical track-based performance swings across the grid. For me that's a nothingburger, like RB bib and water in tyres.
The only thing that wasn't a nothingburger recently was illegal McLaren rear wing