I bet if it is that severe, there will be a TD quickly. I do not see any other levers FIA would have and it was clearly stated, that they will not allow a 2014 situation.ferkan wrote: ↑07 Feb 2026, 01:38I dont think this is the case. Toto went out quite angrily 2 days ago commenting “fix your damn car” and there were reports yesterday of Merc boss saying he would take it to court. If Merc has the trick, its season over and other manufacturers will not let it slide and get embarrassed by someone loopholing their way into dominance if they feel its not by the rule.
So maybe Merc is even playing this smart and does hide this well. Just use the trick for fuel efficiency over the race and engine wear.
Yes it is getting silly...Rodak wrote: ↑07 Feb 2026, 03:40Except that the compression ratio is not measured with a compression tester, it is a measurement of the swept volume as the piston moves up and down compared to the un-swept volume when the piston is fully up. As has been stated here so many times it's getting old, it is the 'geometric' ratio. One measures the total cylinder volume when the piston is down then the total volume when the piston is up and divides one by the other.At room temperature the annulus is open. Only a tiny gap in the annulus is needed for air to pass through during the compression test.
And you naughty boy describe it in a way the fans do not understand...come on...
You should read, what the man writes.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Feb 2026, 09:39Swept volume alone cannot measure compression ratio. You have to include the final compressed volume.
Yes, I also think there is much too much smoke for a nothingburger.
No, I fear it is more just being silly for the sake of being silly. Interpretation A is what the (CURRENT) rules clearly say.
You call this "CAD". Right click..."measure volume"...or similar. In the homologation they work with CAD files and compare them to reality.
The "traditional method" is still used in Rally or Touring cars, where you simply can not put an engine on a 3D scan or CMM, which is no issue in F1.
Furthermore the manufacturer defines how they measure it and FIA approves this (or not). So the manufacturers have some freedom on how they define for example the TDC point of the piston as this depends also on vearing clearences, but not on anything dynamic like pressure/flexing.
If it is true with the extra volume, I do not even think there is real air going through ever. There is no minimal gap definition as far as we know for what they call the clearence volume. I think this is the loophole...there might not be any valve or similar, but really a tiny µm gap to a volume, so that under operation basically no gas will go through.
