catent wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025, 17:08
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What’s frustrating (especially as a Ferrari fan who already swallowed this exact pill in 2022) is seeing people argue that “the measurement is the rule” when the FIA themselves have proven, time and time again, that it isn’t.
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There is a difference between bypassing the actual sensor doing the measurement, and doing something else in a completely different phisical property that under some conditions results in a geometry that is not what was meant to be measured. Subtle difference, but clear, IMO. Same in spirit perhaps, but affecting the measurement device has a directness and a purposefulness that a loophole does not. One can argue that one cannot stop physics from happening, but not that the ruler just happend to break. Again, IMO.
catent wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025, 17:08
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Either:
loopholes that bypass the spirit of a given rule, but pass testing, are acceptable, always …
… or …
the FIA steps in to realign enforcement with intent, as they have many times before. You can’t pick and choose.
Here I am not sure I follow you. History shows that it is not "either", but "and". not always, but 90% of the time. FIA again and again decided that a) they see the loophole beaking the spirit of the rules, but b) they let you keep your points because you met the measurement enforcing the rule as defined on that date (that wing bent too much, that motor burned too much oil). That is a yes for your first statement.
But then, they anounce that from this and that date, the measurment changes so that the final result is closer to the intended spirit of the rules, and from that point on, the car from 3 races ago wouldbe illegal. That is a yes for your second statement.
So I don't see the "you can't have both" part.
This one looks the same to me, likely to "kind of pass" for a few races, but no more from race 9, please. If it is real at all, that is.
Of course sometimes politics result in weird statements like an internal spring being a movable aerodynamic part. But mostly, history with FIA is that you have been naughty and then it becomes a PR problem, we make you stop (from a close future point). Or am I being obtuse and we are basically agreeing and you are only arguing with this last sentence of mine?
At the end of the day, the rules will never be bullet proof. There will always be gray areas and FIA will always have to decide on said shades of gray. Happens in every sport.