Mosin123 wrote: ↑03 Nov 2022, 18:13
DChemTech wrote: ↑03 Nov 2022, 17:44
Mosin123 wrote: ↑03 Nov 2022, 16:19
Could have been worse, Could have changed it for the last lap of the final race...
Indeed, arbitrary deviations by the stewards from point 27.3 of the 2021 sporting regulations during a race weekend and even alterations thereof during a race did affect the outcome of one race. Shame that it's seemingly not possible to set up one set of regulations and role with it for the season, accepting that if a team comes up with a creative interpretation that pushes (but does not breach) the limits, that's simply to be accepted and fixed for the next season, like they did with DAS for example.
More in line with this topic, I do not necessarily agree that changing a sporting regulation during a race is worse than changing a technical regulation during the season: the effects carry through the season (not just one race), and the team loses resources twice: first for the original design (which is now flawed because it did not meet criteria that were not originally communicated), and second for the time and material required to redesign. And that is even more critical in a year with a cost cap - so the introduction of technical directives that fix an omission of the FIA and that hits teams asymmetrically is really to be avoided.
I dissagree, changing a sporting contest to remove the rights of some to contest isnt a sport, it goes against the sporting regulations and the international sporting code. Changing regulations because some one has found a way around them is not the same as excluding 8 of 10 teams and 18 of 20 drivers form competing for the last lap of the last race of a champioship, no matter how you look at it.
If a team found a loophole in the regs and know they shouldnt go their but do because they gain performance, when they eventually lose that advantage, its levelling the playing feild, not excluding most of it. Its " Sporting " not unsporting.
The whole point of any sport is top operate on the edge of what is possible and what is allowed. If you stop pushing boundaries, you stop winning. So, if the sporting regulations leave room to do something clever - you do it (or otherwise your competition will). There is no such thing as a qualitative "spirit of the rules", because everyone will interpret that differently leading to ambiguity and chaos, with teams and regulators disagreeing on what is and what is not allowed and toppling over eachother with accusations of unfair advantages. If the FIA does not want to see a certain thing, they must ensure it's clearly and quantitatively not allowed by the rules - and if they fail to do that, it's not the fault of the team that they used the space that the FIA left available. You cannot expect engineers to adhere to spiritual requirements that were never put to paper - they're engineers, not psychics. Especially in an engineering sport, where the whole point of the competition is to operate on technical boundaries (that are the same for everyone, 'loopholes' or not), it is extremely worrisome if clever use of the room provided is punished - you are being punished for doing your job. And note that is not a 'flexiwing thing', it happened multiple times with different technologies and to different teams over time, and it should not happen.
And yes, deviations from sporting regulations are also not a good thing. But there were more occasions in which that happened than just the last race last year.