Phil wrote:Just_a_fan wrote:I disagree. Red Bull built a wing that passed the test but flexed excessively on track. VW apparently built an engine that passed the test and polluted excessively on the road. It is exactly the same. Either both cheated or neither did.
My view is that VW did nothing wrong. The engine passes the test. Just like hybrids get much better results on the tests because they're allowed to start with a full battery and end with an empty one.
How one can compare this to the RedBull flexi-wing is beyond me, but I'll try anyway:
RedBull's flexi-wing is a piece of material. No logic. Nothing. The FIA designed tests to see how much it flexes in order to 'simulate' certain conditions. The problem herein being; If you apply enough pressure to anything, it *will flex* eventually. During those tests, the wing did not flex, but on the track under higher load it did. Result; The wing passed the test and is therefore legal.
VW designed a device that is
active and changes its behavior according to if it is being tested or not. That would be like if RedBull s'flexi-wing had Transformers-style attributes and could strengthen itself for the test only to go back to normal-mode when in an actual race.
One case is a passive entity - the other is active. That makes it a huge difference. The VW driving on the road with the device inactive has nothing in common with the same VW being tested for emissions in the test-case.
I think that it is more important to see who is being directly affected by the two cases:
1) Flex Wing: RB broke the spirit of the rules by designing to beat the test. In this case the F1 fans that paid for tickets and the Sponsors of the series & teams, along with the teams themselves were "cheated" out of fair results from the races. This is a very expensive but otherwise meaningless sport, the fans didn't directly lose too money by purchasing tickets.
2) VW diesel: here VW broke the spirit of the rules by creating a software which recognizese when the engine is being tested and runs to pass the test. The major difference is that criminal law were broken here, as Bhall mentioned, and vehicles were sold to 11 million people under the presumption that they were not just passing the test but also emitting these emissions under normal circumstances - which has been proven not to be the case. Assuming that the average Price of each car is 20,000€, we are speaking about 220,000,000,000€ which was taken out of the pockets of the people (the civil cases coming from this will be ludicris). Add the simple fact that VW would have had to pay millions in fines for exceeding the limits, they also purposely screwed over all governments in those countries in which these cars were sold (or they may have not even been allowed to sell them). Here in Germany tax evasion is punished much worse than any other crime, including murder, sex crimes etc., so this could get interesting when the investigations start here.
Summary: both did not brake the written rules, but in the case of VW they didn't cheat to win a few races but willfully cheated the public to increase their profit.
“Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony!” Monty Python and the Holy Grail