Cs98 wrote: ↑23 Oct 2023, 14:20
You seem to be under the illusion I am calling the new Merc floor illegal

That is incorrect. I am calling into question whether the apparent performance step we saw is due to the new floor or the fact they were running the car illegally (running it too low). It's a perfectly valid point since both Merc and Ferrari (who were also too low) were closer relative to RB than we have come to expect. The answer will be seen in the coming races, but you should pay more attention to what I am actually arguing instead of reading into it what you want me to be saying. That is the only bias I am seeing here.
Had Max not had his quali time deleted he'd have been 10 seconds+ up the road by the first pitstops. So you're ignoring this to postulate the gaps have come down. That's unequivocal bias I'm afraid.
McLaren had issues with tyre life even to those outside of Ferrari and Mercedes. As Norris said:
We knew our struggles, we knew what was going to be difficult today. And it was just the degradation but the pace over the first 10 laps of every stint
Ignoring this to further form a basis of a fundamentally unprovable speculation is also bias.
Running 1mm closer to the ground might make the plank wear more, but it certainly won't give you a 0.7 faster time in the sprint and 0.5 in the race.
I'll repeat, less FP running time and a sprint weekend is not conducive to teams getting their optimum set up.
We saw the mess at Qatar what happens when there's less running.
It stands to reason and scrutiny that if the car was legal for the sprint race, and was disqualified for the actual race, that for large periods of the race the plank was legit and oversight due to lack of run time is far more accurate than an intentional clickbait "running it illegally".