That is incorrect.
you can see the list of individual aero components in the document.The following aerodynamic component or bodywork areas were checked on car numbers 11, 04 and 22:
A physical floor and a plank wear inspection was carried out on car numbers 01, 16, 44 and 04.
A fuel sample was taken from car number 55.
The fuel samples have been checked for density and analysed by gas chromatography.
The results of all the fuel analyses show that the fuels were the same as ones, which had been
approved for use by the relevant competitors prior to the Competition.
Further the density change of the fuel samples taken today was within the permitted limits.
An engine oil sample was taken from car number 55.
The engine oil samples have been analysed by FTIR spectroscopy and viscometry.
The results of the FTIR analyses show that the sampled oils were consistent with reference engine
oil samples which had been approved for use by the relevant competitors prior to the Competition.
From the press release:ValeVida46 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 20:53The FIA can check every plank if there was a desire for consistency. They are willing to pay the winners of a Sprint race 1 million dollars, but can't check the legality of each cars plank after every race.
Step back...think about that for just a second I implore you.
The race finished on sunday, and they have to pack the entire circus up and have it ready by no later than thursday night thousands of miles away.In conducting these tests, a huge amount of work goes on in the limited time available after a Grand Prix finishes and before the cars need to be returned to their teams for disassembly and transportation to the next race. However, even though a wide array of checks are made, it is impossible to cover every parameter of every car in the short time available – and this is especially true of back-to-back race weekends when freight deadlines must also be considered.
F1 is so competitive in nature, so it is also possible that teams are always actively spying on one another. For ride hide that is certainly something that is noticeable from the trackside. And since ground effect now contributes to more than 50% of the car downforce, teams will be paying more attention in that area, especially for Merc since they have brought a new floor to the race. In some way, this sport on its own is self-governing. FIA may just be acting like it's random.Cs98 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 18:18Strange time to criticise the FIA for ineptitude when they just used their post-race inspection process to bust two illegal cars at the same race. The time to criticise them for "bias" would've been before, when they had checked certain cars more than others but never found anything. The USGP only serves to validate the FIA knew what they were doing and clearly have a process in place for monitoring suspected offenders. I'm more at ease knowing that rather than believing the selection is 100% random. Then it would truly be a lottery of "are we going to get away with it this time".ValeVida46 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 16:51If there is bias raised from previous races being projected into a future race, that would alleviate others from the same scrutiny. That much is clear from the numbers of inspections we've seen some teams get over others.TFSA wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 16:39You 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.
I mean we literally just had a driver go off track 28 times without sanction, this was picked up by a random on twitter.
I'd say the FIA at this both point are both incompetent and stupid.
A second fact worth mentioning is that the teams knew about and agreed to these inspection procedures. Hamilton, Leclerc, Mercedes, and Ferrari had plank checks at previous GPs and were aware that not everyone gets checked. To now throw the toys out and make baseless accusations of others of being out of tolerance solely because your own car was thrown out is just sour grapes.CHT wrote: ↑27 Oct 2023, 00:35F1 is so competitive in nature, so it is also possible that teams are always actively spying on one another. For ride hide that is certainly something that is noticeable from the trackside. And since ground effect now contributes to more than 50% of the car downforce, teams will be paying more attention in that area, especially for Merc since they have brought a new floor to the race. In some way, this sport on its own is self-governing. FIA may just be acting like it's random.Cs98 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 18:18Strange time to criticise the FIA for ineptitude when they just used their post-race inspection process to bust two illegal cars at the same race. The time to criticise them for "bias" would've been before, when they had checked certain cars more than others but never found anything. The USGP only serves to validate the FIA knew what they were doing and clearly have a process in place for monitoring suspected offenders. I'm more at ease knowing that rather than believing the selection is 100% random. Then it would truly be a lottery of "are we going to get away with it this time".ValeVida46 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 16:51
If there is bias raised from previous races being projected into a future race, that would alleviate others from the same scrutiny. That much is clear from the numbers of inspections we've seen some teams get over others.
I mean we literally just had a driver go off track 28 times without sanction, this was picked up by a random on twitter.
I'd say the FIA at this both point are both incompetent and stupid.
The fia should have burned to ground numerous times over the decades. Somehow it always manages to had wave away issues.
TFSA wrote: ↑27 Oct 2023, 00:00From the press release:ValeVida46 wrote: ↑26 Oct 2023, 20:53The FIA can check every plank if there was a desire for consistency. They are willing to pay the winners of a Sprint race 1 million dollars, but can't check the legality of each cars plank after every race.
Step back...think about that for just a second I implore you.The race finished on sunday, and they have to pack the entire circus up and have it ready by no later than thursday night thousands of miles away.In conducting these tests, a huge amount of work goes on in the limited time available after a Grand Prix finishes and before the cars need to be returned to their teams for disassembly and transportation to the next race. However, even though a wide array of checks are made, it is impossible to cover every parameter of every car in the short time available – and this is especially true of back-to-back race weekends when freight deadlines must also be considered.
Money can't invent you a time machine.
As for the Sprint race 1 million dollars:
- That's still just an idea.
- It says it could potentially stretch to 1 million dollars - not that it will.
- It says specifically in the articles mentioned that the idea is to get a sponsor on board - so someone else will be footing the bill.