Sieper wrote: ↑13 May 2021, 23:04
I don’t believe that is a correct statement. It was both Honda and Mercedes pushing for an extension of qualy mode. And Honda had big, big problems due to it being abolished. Or have you missed Max’s start and engine issues shenanigans.
So to answer your question, right? No, wrong.
I wonder what actually prompted it. In the long run it has been an improvement as teams are now closer in qualy. Over the whole, at the top, and certainly in the big midfield.
It was red bull.
https://www.planetf1.com/news/red-bull- ... -pressure/
Red Bull’s motorsport advisor, Dr Helmut Marko, has said the team did apply “pressure” to get the ‘party mode’ engine setting banned by the FIA.
The qualifying session at the upcoming Italian Grand Prix will be an intriguing one as we await to see whether a ban on qualy mode engine settings will have an impact on the starting grid pecking order.
Mercedes, via the aid of their ‘party mode’ option, has absolutely trounced the opposition on Saturday afternoons with Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas in their own exclusive battles for pole position.
But Red Bull, whose last pole position came at the 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix, were one of the teams to put pressure on the FIA to get the qualifying engine modes outlawed.
“It was very important to us that it was abolished. We put the necessary pressure behind that,” he explained to Auto Motor und Sport.
“The quali mode at Mercedes is so extreme that it is already distorting the competition.
“It’s the kind of intervention that we’ve experienced many times as we dominated. The wing flexibility has been changed from one race to another and again for the next race.
“I don’t need to talk about the blown diffuser. It is also the job of Formula 1 to ensure balanced, exciting races.”