Cs98 wrote: ↑26 Jul 2023, 21:42
Tiny73 wrote: ↑26 Jul 2023, 20:51
Maybe you’d like to tell me how you see it instead of just dismissing my point outright as unrealistic, especially since RB have done exactly what my scenario depicts. They gained significantly and haven’t (to date) been punished. We can disagree but please try and be respectful.
You are arguing in bad faith, hence the response. Here's how I see it:
a, The primary punishment was a WT reduction, not a fine like you suggest. b, RB didn't know what the specific punishment was going to be, hence could not reason in the way you suggest. c, You've presumed RB intentionally broke the cap, we don't know this. d, You've presumed they gained significantly from the breach, we don't know this. e, There is no formula for x amount of money = x amount of lap time, like your scenario suggests. f, You've stated there was no punishment, which is just factually incorrect and can only be interpreted as bad faith. If you'd said "I think the punishment was inadequate", we could have a discussion.
All in all I don't think your scenario provides much value for a serious discussion about the CC.
There’s nothing bad faith about it.
A) They were fined $7m (which doesn’t come out of the budget cap) and had a future reduction in wind tunnel time. Future penalty, not one relating to their overspend, such as a points deduction for example or an in-season penalty. I’ll concede that there was a penalty and therefore my point was factually incorrect but I suspect you know that I was referring to penalising their overspend directly vs one that would/could/may/may not impact them markedly going forward. But you knew that, right?
B) You’re absolutely right about the cost vs lap time discussion but you don’t spend the money in anticipation of going slower do you? (Even Mercedes aren’t doing that, despite the results suggesting otherwise
)
C) The punishment was a future punishment (with the exception of the small fine), not one that has had a material impact on them until now if the spin is to be believed that they have to now work on the 2024 car as a result of the penalty.
D) Even the penalty was reduced to 10 % of their post success allotted wind tunnel time, not 10% and then their “success ballast” allocation of wind tunnel time (10% of 70 is not the same as 10% of 100 minus the 30%).
E) RB had every opportunity to test the budget cap assumptions and chose not to. Whether they did this willingly or deceptively we’ll never know, but they had exactly the same opportunities as every other team. Who all managed to stay under the cap.
Oh, and if you don’t think any of the above is the basis for a discussion then feel free to ignore it rather than dismissing it as “bad faith” when it’s anything but.