Nobody seems to have analysed what Nikolas Tombazis actually said:
“We felt it was feasible, because we felt there wasn’t any discussion of anything illegal. We think people have spent time designing their engines and solutions,” he said. “We didn’t feel it was fair to do something for the start of the season.
“We felt it was wrong, but we also didn’t feel it was something as it was beyond what we felt was the intention of the rules.
“We felt it was correct to also not let it go on too much. There’s a degree of subjectivity there. I can’t say that is the only solution that a human can think of, but we felt it was a balanced approach; as I say, ultimately, we haven’t decided anything.
“We’ve decided to, after a lot of discussions, to launch this vote. The result of the vote will determine whether that thing happens or not.
“If the vote gets approved by the PU manufacturers and by the World Council, then the engines that run from August onwards will have to be legal to that parameter.
“If somebody is beyond that level in Melbourne, then they will have to make adjustments. But I don’t want to comment on what people’s technical solutions are in Melbourne, but I do also stress that I think this matter isn’t really something that is anywhere near as important as people make out.”
I've bolded what I think are the important bits. If it wasn't beyond the intention of the rules, then it wasn't delivering more than 16:1 when hot, surely?
On the other hand it is "wrong". This implies to me the Merc engine used thermal expansion to seal a small chamber somewhere to restore 16:1 from the 15.2:1 it would otherwise be. If the solution used thermal expansion without a second chamber, then it would just be clever and they probably wouldn't say it was wrong.
What isn't clear is if the maximum CR on the hot test will be 16:1 or some value between 15.2:1 and 16:1. If it's 16:1 then it's a massive win for Mercedes as the other manufacturers need to recreate what they did. If it's less than 16:1, then "We felt it was correct to also not let it go on too much" and "degree of subjectivity there" come in to play.
