RB will just do as much aero dev as they want and they will account the hours beyond the limit as if they were a leisure benefit they give to their aero engineers to develop their hobby projectsjjn9128 wrote: ↑29 Oct 2022, 12:04Then there's the question of how Wolff knew about it ahead of time. There's something seriously dodgy in the FIA, whether you agree with this latest penalty or not. The race directors seem to be at odds with the stewards, and the general management of the sport seems to be just off - not sure how else to describe it. Big teams seem to get more leeway on infringements than smaller teams, e.g. Haas get the meatball flag multiple times but Hamilton has half a front wing hanging off or Perez/Russell have an endplate flapping about for most of a race and that's okay.Edax wrote: ↑29 Oct 2022, 11:45Yeah, for me it would be time to close this. Finance is difficult, when it involves a complex supply chain and multiple tax regimes. I can fully see how this overrun was unintentional, but it is an overrun nevertheless.
So there will always be people that think the punishment is to light or too heavy, so be it.
There is one thing that nags me though. And that is the role of Wolff. I do feel that the initial accusations of Wolff based on partial and inaccurate information blew this thing out of proportion and set the stage for the toxic discussions that followed.
And to be honest that is not the first time, not even this season. Actually I like the guy and I understand that he is emotionally invested in the sport but he is also a spokesman for the team, his words have consequences. And unfortunately he is not balanced by Lauda anymore.
Starting fires among a highly volatile fanbase is not helping the sport. It only leads to frustration and conflict.
I do think that too has to have a repercussion. Not something big or consequential, but a symbolic slap on the wrist, to hopefully have him watch his words better in the future.
Red Bull seem to be the latest example as the team in the FIAs good graces, but Merc and Ferrari have benefitted from perceived favouritism in the past.
The penalty is fair, 10% loss of aero dev on top of already having less time is a big punishment, but wont have an immediate effect. I expect like a Brawn '09 scenario where they start strong based on the development done this year but then drop backwards through the year.