subcritical71 wrote: ↑07 Aug 2020, 15:04
The method of design was declared illegal not the part itself. But I do see that if you think your going to spend more the $400K on designing a part, you may be better off outsourcing it to a competitor! But I also fault the FIA for this. RP didn't actually break any applicable rules at the time their actions took place. And the rules did not consider that the RBD which were run last year (I've seen conflicting reports on this) could be used by the same team this year. There should have been a provision one way or the other specified. I bit like when they decreased the amount of oil burning that could be done. Merc took advantage by using a PU prior to the rule change. They knew the rule was changing but intent of the rule change didn't bite them in that case did it.
This ruling potentially opens up a whole can of beans if not sorted. B-teams might reckon they could score 15 points in a good race so why not take the risk and dock up 400K is you could recover that and more end of the year in prize money due to a better position in the championship.
What other sporting regulations can be broken and give performance? Wind tunnel or CFD runs come to mind... Dock up a few hundred thousand in cash and points but you can put a better developed package (
that 100% complies to the technical regulations but was developed in breach of the sporting regulations) on the grid that will recover the lost revenue and points in a race or two possibly.
The FIA need to come down hard and fast on the matter.