bhall II wrote:
To be clear, FRIC isn't banned, because the wording of the regulations can't be changed mid-season without the unanimous consent of the teams, and there's nothing written that specifically disallows an interconnected suspension. So, no team would be summarily prohibited from running the system as would be the case if a team submitted for scrutineering a car equipped with a blatantly illegal component, like
this gem Ferrari tried to pass off as a "slot-gap separator" in 2011. The clarification simply gave notice that a protest against the system won't fall upon deaf ears.
It's this what I've been telling the whole time. There will be no regulatory banning until 2016 -unless unanimous agreement- for fric.
basti313 wrote:
This is the same discussion like last weak: No one is running FRIC anymore, so the teams interpret the rules and the "one may protest"-letter from Charlie like I do: They are to strong and give not enough room to play games.
The theoretical discussion in this forums may lead to another result, but reality tells us that FRIC is banned.
No they interpret it as "we could run it, but I don't trust the other teams since they could rat me out". They could firmly disagree, but they don't want to take the risk since fric isn't a wonder system, bringing at most a couple of tenths and a reduced tyre wear. Ironically, the latter is the biggest advantage to fric, a purely mechanical matter which doesn't interfere with 3.15.
Yes, it is an arbitrary line. But I think it makes total sense as "do not connect front and rear axle" is a very good clarification, that leaves not much grey areas or is unfair.
It isn't.
-Red Bull is rumored to run other suspension system that could also be interpreted as trying to influence ride height.
-J-dampers, an even older suspension solution and the successor of the mass-dampers, has the very same intention as the mass-dampers, is run and has been run by the entire field since 2006.
-If a team could absolutely prove that connecting the front and rear is, lets say, purely a stifness solution which doesn't influence the ride height at all, is then disallowed? It doesn't fall foul to 3.15, so I'd say no.
The clarification is dodgy, hugely dodgy.