You cannot add a separate lever to change toe, it won't comply with 10.2.1sucof wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 18:20As discussed above: this is not steering. Just because it is done with the steering wheel, it does not change the direction of the car. Following this logic: any button you press on the steering wheel is steering too? If they would have added a separate lever to change the toe, nobody would think that this is a new method of steering.Holm86 wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 18:12It's not part of the setup, it's part of the steering. It's not a geometry change any different than turning the steering wheel is a geometry changeenri_the_red wrote: ↑20 Feb 2020, 18:09Even if the DAS complies with the technical regulations (and I don't think it does), will its usage comply with the sporting regulations? for example with art. 34.1 (notify the FIA with a suspension setup sheet before qualifying) and art 34.6 (no modification or suspension setup changes under parc fermé)
I also think that the reason they told us what is the name of this new concept, is to influence our thinking that this is steering, while it is not.
10.2.1 With the steering wheel fixed, the position of each wheel centre and the orientation of its rotation axis must be completely and uniquely defined by a function of its principally vertical suspension travel, save only for the effects of reasonable compliance which does not intentionally provide further degrees of freedom.
Being changed by the steering wheel is what turns it legal.