The problem is the way Collantine frames the discussion. Not only does he take the following out of context, he states it as if it bears any relevance to the issue.
Teams can gain performance without an ‘unfreeze’
Away from the PR war, Ferrari’s own technical staff admit the current staged engine freeze is not a serious obstacle to them being able to catch Mercedes. “It’s true you can’t change every part of the engine,” said technical director James Allison in September, “but the regulations say the majority of parts that can make a difference in terms of performance on the engine are still free.”
“The 48% is not a binding figure and can be misleading compared to what are the real opportunities to improve the power output of the power unit. The way is completely open when it comes to the rules.”
That teams have latitude when it comes to
how they update their PUs has never been in doubt; like everything else, the rules are very explicit in that regard. Moreover, and this is very important,
no one is asking that those particular rules be changed.
The question concerns
when updates should be introduced.
As seen above, manufacturers have 32 "points" to "spend" from the available list of allowed updates. Does anyone think that any manufacturer will fail to "spend" the allowed "points" from year to year? Does anyone think that research and development into those components is confined to the offseason? If the answer to those questions is no - and I really hope we can all agree on that one - how will it significantly increase costs to allow in-season updates to components that will be updated regardless?
Richard wrote:[...]
Of course the solution is to mandate a flat fee for customer engines. Then we don't need to care how much Ferarri, Renault and Merc spend in their arms race because the other teams get a flat rate.
[...]
Works for me. It's not like customer teams get equal equipment from their suppliers anyway.