Is there a theory ?maygun wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 10:27With fixed wing, if the car becomes quicker, I wonder what the next "theory" of the armchair aero experts would be: https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/myst ... d-f1-2026/
Still, it's illegal. And they should be disqualified. If the fuel flow an engine accidentally goes above the limit, even for a moment it's an automatic disqualification. Not penalizing it will just lead to more of these accidentally-on-purpose "miscalculations".johnnycesup wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 12:32Yeah, the whole "loophhole" idea was a bit crazy to me.
Still we found a couple of things out:
- The system is hydraulic (a pneumatic system would make very little sense)
- The "low pressure" position is the straight line mode
- Mercedes were probably told to fix it before Suzuka
I agree, because if the car is underweight because of a miscalculation you still get disqualified. The reason why they did not is that they did not gain an advantage. It may be true, but if in Japan they end up having the same behaviour, that would be something extremely suspicious.mzso wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 15:24Still, it's illegal. And they should be disqualified. If the fuel flow an engine accidentally goes above the limit, even for a moment it's an automatic disqualification. Not penalizing it will just lead to more of these accidentally-on-purpose "miscalculations".johnnycesup wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 12:32Yeah, the whole "loophhole" idea was a bit crazy to me.
Still we found a couple of things out:
- The system is hydraulic (a pneumatic system would make very little sense)
- The "low pressure" position is the straight line mode
- Mercedes were probably told to fix it before Suzuka
It's pneumatic. Otherwise it would be odd to have a label which says "no gas pressure"? but then this can also be a case of the semantics of german engineers who learn english.johnnycesup wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 12:32Yeah, the whole "loophhole" idea was a bit crazy to me.
Still we found a couple of things out:
- The system is hydraulic (a pneumatic system would make very little sense)
- The "low pressure" position is the straight line mode
- Mercedes were probably told to fix it before Suzuka
The theory was that they were using this mechanism as an advantage, with very sure, opinionated arguments.Farnborough wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 12:41Is there a theory ?maygun wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 10:27With fixed wing, if the car becomes quicker, I wonder what the next "theory" of the armchair aero experts would be: https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/myst ... d-f1-2026/
They've got a defined time to close it, without exception or tolerance outside that. Clearly the rules state that for a reason, and they were in breech of a hard limit.
That will always generate conjecture in this sport. We can't see what it did in reality, but suspicion will always come towards such a clear breech.
You're citing an article from a longtime Mercedes sympathizer, Mark Hughes. Same guy that jumps to Mercedes defense every time they are under regulatory pressure. Last time he wrote a rubbish article claiming that the compression ratio reg changed backfired on rival teams and that they would vote against the compression ratio regulations changes that they requested.maygun wrote: โ26 Mar 2026, 10:27With fixed wing, if the car becomes quicker, I wonder what the next "theory" of the armchair aero experts would be: https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/myst ... d-f1-2026/