turbof1 wrote:It's not as good as you might believe. They are in only allowed to one homologated power unit a time, but they can homologate as much as they want. That'll probably mean they'll have some updates on the power unit already in Melbourne. It also means that they can focus now on the updates they want to bring to Melbourne instead of the whole engine, enabling them to extract extra performance out of those parts instead of having to deal with all the allowed updates at once.
I think what turbo is I timating is that teams can turn up with an upgraded PU and then continue to update through the season.KeiKo403 wrote:I think when people are discussing what's fair and unfair......great, that's your opinion.
Being fair counts for nothing in F1. Every Team wants an edge on the competition.
Honda need to have a homologated power unit pre 28 Feb 14. They don't have that and they must have a homologated PU for FP3 in Melbourne 2015. Once they homologate that's it. That's the rules....is it not!? Other manufatures PU's have already been homologated and therefore can start this season without updates.
Question is, PU manufatures have already spent millions working out how to best spend their 32 tokens and developing upgrades. By starting 2015 with a 2014 un-upgraded PU is only going to gaurentee that you won't do any better than last year. Why do that if you are Ferrari or Renault?
It's a mess! Could Sauber claim some form of damages compensation from Ferrari as they have paid for some of Ferrari's upgrades and they aren't getting them because Ferrari may want to release them later in the season while Sauber could be looking to start of 2015 with a couple of good points hauls and then try to manage the rest of their season.
I thought the same at he beginning... until I saw this:turbof1 wrote:It's not as good as you might believe. They are in only allowed to one homologated power unit a time, but they can homologate as much as they want. That'll probably mean they'll have some updates on the power unit already in Melbourne. It also means that they can focus now on the updates they want to bring to Melbourne instead of the whole engine, enabling them to extract extra performance out of those parts instead of having to deal with all the allowed updates at once.
Are we reading the same rulebook?Once homologated in accordance with a) or b) above, and except as permitted by (c)
below, no changes may be made to the design or construction of the homologated
parts for the duration of the homologation period laid out in Article 28.5 of the F1
Sporting Regulations.
This one is really unfair for Honda. If FIA regulated that Honda follow the last year's protocol as followed by other manufacturers, they should be allowed 5 PUs for the season. Without any track experience, it would be hard for them to run their engine to optimum performance level. They will always have to run with conservative mode to extend the life of 4PUs for a whole season. That is sh**. Will Alonso never again will win another championship?Richard wrote: However new entrants such as Honda don't get that year 1 benefit, their PU has to be as reliable an experienced supplier.
but i thought you cant do that?Richard wrote:The PU is frozen when it is homologated. However the date of homolgation is not set. For instance, a team can turn up at the first race with a 2104 PU with 20 tokens of updates over the winter, then update the design with another 6 tokens on the second unit, then 4 tokens on the 3rd unit, then a final 2 tokens on the 4th unit, then homologate at the last race.
You cant upgrade 20 tokens and race as that would mean you are racing with an Unhomologated design!For instance, a team can turn up at the first race with a 2104 PU with 20 tokens of updates over the winter
They dont have a 2014 engine, so they cant use it at the start like other teams and then upgrade later and homologate onceGPR-A wrote:This one is really unfair for Honda. If FIA regulated that Honda follow the last year's protocol as followed by other manufacturers, they should be allowed 5 PUs for the season. Without any track experience, it would be hard for them to run their engine to optimum performance level. They will always have to run with conservative mode to extend the life of 4PUs for a whole season. That is sh**. Will Alonso never again will win another championship?Richard wrote: However new entrants such as Honda don't get that year 1 benefit, their PU has to be as reliable an experienced supplier.
Mea culpa - I think you are probably correct because of the rule that they can only use a homolgated engine in a race.siskue2005 wrote:but i thought you cant do that?Richard wrote:The PU is frozen when it is homologated. However the date of homolgation is not set. For instance, a team can turn up at the first race with a 2104 PU with 20 tokens of updates over the winter, then update the design with another 6 tokens on the second unit, then 4 tokens on the 3rd unit, then a final 2 tokens on the 4th unit, then homologate at the last race.
as the 32 tokens should be upgraded at once and only once you can homologate?
they start with 2014 Engines and PUs
then they can upgrade their engine and pu with 32 tokens and then if done they have to homologate and that is it!
You cant upgrade 20 tokens and race as that would mean you are racing with an Unhomologated design!
So when you upgrade u have to homologate (just once not more)
that is how i understood from james allen's article or am i understanding it wrong??
Hang on a second, I can't see anything that says homolgation can only take place once a season. Only this bit:28.5 Only power units which have been homologated by the FIA in accordance with Appendix 4 may be used at an Event during the 2014-2020 Championship seasons.
One would expect 28.5 would refer to the homolgation period being one season, but it doesn't (see quote above).App 4, clause 1(b) wrote:Once homologated in accordance with a) or b) above, and except as permitted by (c) below, no changes may be made to the design or construction of the homologated parts for the duration of the homologation period laid out in Article 28.5 of the F1 Sporting Regulations.
By doing so they ensure the protest will fail. That's not fair businessdiffuser wrote:On http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/formula1/30685450
It says
"Honda, which has returned to F1 this season following an absence of six years, has the option of lodging a protest against Ferrari, who discovered the loophole that has led to the change in interpretation of the rules by the FIA."
So I wonder what happens if Honda Files a protest just before FP3 in Australia ? Nobody will be allowed any engine mods till it's ruled on ?
I mean, that's what I'd do. I'd wait till someone was ready to apply an update(guess-a-mate), file a protest and block it for as long as possible. Usually major upgrades happen around the first euro race (Spain). If you get lucky..maybe some aero updates are dependent on PU changes(2 birds with 1 stone).
But last year it was the Team who got 5 PU's per driver/side of the garage for Caterham/Marussia. So for 2 years in a row, McLaren get 5 PU's per driver. Lotus could argue that they worked with Renault last season and now they've switched to Merc that they too need the extra PU as they don't know how chassis and PU will combine for reliability.GPR-A wrote:This one is really unfair for Honda. If FIA regulated that Honda follow the last year's protocol as followed by other manufacturers, they should be allowed 5 PUs for the season. Without any track experience, it would be hard for them to run their engine to optimum performance level. They will always have to run with conservative mode to extend the life of 4PUs for a whole season. That is sh**. Will Alonso never again will win another championship?Richard wrote: However new entrants such as Honda don't get that year 1 benefit, their PU has to be as reliable an experienced supplier.
Lets put everything out can weRichard wrote:One would expect 28.5 would refer to the homolgation period being one season, but it doesn't (see quote above).App 4, clause 1(b) wrote:Once homologated in accordance with a) or b) above, and except as permitted by (c) below, no changes may be made to the design or construction of the homologated parts for the duration of the homologation period laid out in Article 28.5 of the F1 Sporting Regulations.
So it seems the FIA haven't defined a homolgation period, just like they didn't specify a homolgation date.
Where is that in the regs?siskue2005 wrote:Lets put everything out can we
1. You can only homologate ONCE