Farnborough wrote: ↑24 Nov 2025, 08:20
I believe there maybe some confusion, on here and in general reporting, about whats being measured.
There's three holes in skid assembly specifically to facilitate measurement by placing the micrometer through the hole to "clamp" for want of better word, on the periphery of that hole, and so determine the thickness as we see it stated.
Additional to this are specific "skid" blocks embedded into various point of the plank surface, these not measured as I understand.
The implication, from that Brazil exposè, was that THESE block were somehow being expanded or moved by heating to protrude down below the surface of the plank.
The net effect projected would be these to strike the track BEFORE the measurement holes surfaces, and so protect those critical measurement areas from wearing. Those measurement areas don't appear to be the target of heating claims, spurious or not as they were reported.
Allowing the assembly to cool and having a "target" temp in regulations:- likely impractical as tge ambient temperature around the world is still different at each location raced.
In reality, the teams have a tolerance all of it above 9mm, choosing or not taking into account the affect a race distance has on that material they start with, over and above the 9mm, is in their sole control. They commit to keeping within the regulations the whole time its competing.
They measure all sort of compliance themselves, this just one of them.
Effectively, they "gamed" this dimension for ultimate pace, as do all teams, and failed to conserve enough material. The method of measurement is not at fault.
Maybe just one point of wear being too much could be explained as accidentally heavy curb strike .... but not multiple locations AND across both cars ! that's planning. Also admirable in their setup accuracy, but a step too far. Especially considering the points gap they had in championship coming into this race.