Irish I hear where your coming from - but its one set of guidelines for all and its all in the interpretation - which is what it should be all about - forget setting in concrete rules that stifle the creative souls left in the business. As for the FIA settling this back in January yes they had two teams (Williams & Toyota) who they indeed ruled were within the guidelines at that time - suddenly when Brawn came on the scene in testing the other teams were allowed to question the validity of the design of not only Brawn but Toyota & Williams then it escalated when Brawn won the Australian GP and subsequently the shortened Malaysian GP. The FIA have to stand up and be counted - the rules/guidelines are never going to be perfect but dont kill the goose when it comes to freedom of design applicationkilcoo316 wrote:'cos you cannot have one set of rules for one bunch, and another set for another.Chaparral wrote:Timbo - simple question - why??
The FIA have dropped the ball (again) - if they had said the things were legal back in January, then we wouldn't have this problem.
edit: Note that clarify does not automatically mean ban - it can mean approval.
I'm not against technical innovation. But I'm against ridiculous innovation. And in my view the perspective of creating unmeaningful suspension geometries (to avoid them being seen from below) to only allow bigger diffuser is dumb and potentially dangerous.Chaparral wrote:Timbo - simple question - why??timbo wrote:I think in any case FIA should clarify the rules regarding "slots". Cause designers have a tendency to exploit every possibility they have to a maximal extent.
Hmm....xpensive wrote:That's a good point too, Fil. My guess would be that if a hole is not fully enclosed, it is not a "hole" anymore.
Perhaps it is a "slot", which seems to be one of Brawn's arguments, but define "fully enclosed"?.
I'm not a native speaker, so I may have a different view, but perhaps by "fully enclosed" they simply mean to prevent a "valley" or channel? If you look at, say, the regular diffuser, it's a "channel" - not fully enclosed - but if covered at the end, it'd be "fully enclosed"?xpensive wrote:That's a good point too, Fil. My guess would be that if a hole is not fully enclosed, it is not a "hole" anymore.
Perhaps it is a "slot", which seems to be one of Brawn's arguments, but define "fully enclosed"?.
We don't know what RBR's design looked like. Unless RBR shows their proposed design, it's impossible for observers to say whether or not the design was similar to what the 'Diffuser 3' are currently running, or whether the design was simply flat-out illegal.kilcoo316 wrote:
Err....
No.
If RBR asked and were told "no they couldn't", it wouldn't exactly make sense to waste development time on a supposedly illegal system.