ValeVida46 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 16:19
They checked and failed to find anything 4 times previously.
You cannot call something a random check when the selection process is anything but random.
Because if they're admitting they use bobbling heads as a metric, it isn't a random check. I can elaborate further if this is not understood.
And what kind of proof is not checking 2 teams
at all, as evidence it works?
You check something more times you have more chance to find something. It really is as simple as that.
We use the term word "random" for computer generated random numbers as well, despite them in reality only being pseudo-random (ei, generated by an computer algorithm, typically a Hash-function which is fed some data).
"Random" in this case means that the FIA can, at their discretion, subject different cars to checks for whatever reason they feel like.
That they 4 selected cars at the US GP was the 3 podium cars + the polesitter, and that they selected this specific race to do extra plank checks (often they don't check them at all, or maybe 1-2 cars at the most) certainly wasn't random. We can't exactly say what is behind their decision (data, gut feeling), but it was clearly driven by them suspecting something, at least with some of the cars.
ValeVida46 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 16:36
What this demonstrates is a double tiered process of scrutiny that relies on previous suspicions as a pretext for future checks. 8 teams can then push the boundaries while 2 others keep getting checked.
You can't safely conclude that. If the FIA is basing their decisions on cars to check partly on data, then 8 other teams pushing the rules is gonna get figured out - maybe not immediately, but at some point.
I know the FIA sometimes presents themselves as somewhat incompetent, but they're not that stupid.