basti313 wrote: ↑10 Feb 2026, 12:48
Well, this is the issue. Unfortunately Toto is correct: “The power unit is legal. The power unit corresponds to how the regulations are written. The power unit corresponds to how the checks are being done.”
This is the truth that too many here try to somehow not see. The CR is measured at ambient. Period. How much it is when the engine is running does not play any role in the current rules.
No, Toto is still talking nonsense.
He's quite aggressively claiming his engine complies with the rules because it passes the test.
He's conflating two completely unrelated things, and he knows it perfectly well, because they are two entirely different issues.
Assuming the compression increase is as specified during racing, his engine doesn't comply with the rules.
That's a fact.
His engine does pass the test, though.
That's also a fact.
But passing the test doesn't make the engine legal. It only shows that the testing criteria aren't sufficient to prove the rule violation.
That's precisely why there's the overarching rule that Formula 1 cars must comply with the rules in their entirety at all times during a competition.
Toto is obviously aware of this rule. That's why he's panicking about a change in the testing criteria and throwing up smokescreens.
No one can verify his claim that everything has been coordinated with the FIA, and no one knows what inquiries or hypotheses have been submitted to the FIA for clarification. Tombazi's statements certainly raise considerable doubts as to whether the FIA was aware of Mercedes' intentions.