"Your reasoning only works if Mercedes initially took that risk of running an unreliable mode, rather than detecting potential issues in testing and subsequently detuning the units before the 1st race"bosyber wrote: ↑01 Sep 2021, 17:16Your reasoning only works if Mercedes initially took that risk of running an unreliable mode, rather than detecting potential issues in testing and subsequently detuning the units before the 1st race, rather than doing like Honda who ran the 1st race in what turned out to be a risky mode during that race and having to only than having to detune it, making the issue visible to their competition.Dee wrote: ↑01 Sep 2021, 16:41"there were some unreliability risks before they managed to iron those out with updates that were finally finalized at that GP"bosyber wrote: ↑01 Sep 2021, 16:32
And how about Mercedes can show that the 'design performance' is only being achieved since Silverstone bc. there were some unreliability risks before they managed to iron those out with updates that were finally finalized at that GP? It rarely is as simple as you make it out to be.
Unreliable means that you can run it but it is unreliable and may break down, therefore a risk
Unrealiable means that Mercedes run that technology at Bahrain and then do what Honda did, detune and fix it
What Mercedes did is run a Spec 1 engine in Bahrain and then added new technology to come back with a Spec 2 in Silverstone. This should not be at all allowed.
And given how Mercedes have mostly been running their PU risk-averse during the hybrid-period, which is one reason they long had a much better reliability record than others (helped that they had an advantage that made that choice a lot easier), and with the limit on PU's allowed during a season it certainly makes sense to be conservative in running (esp. when they at the moment have the lead in the WDC). That's the whole reason there was speculation that the PU issues Williams had were due to them being allowed to do _more_ risky stuff than the factory team allowed itself.
You seem to be arguing from what you want things to be, rather from what's likely. I am not saying they cannot be doing something fishy or even illegal, but your argument doesn't make a good case for it.
You want the FIA to allow teams change their engines to a better engine mid season because they couldn't run their preferred one at the start? Updates are not allowed, whatsever. You run a detuned engine from race 1, that's your engine performance for the year. It's not the FIA's fault, or Honda's fault or anyone else's fault that Mercedes did not have their engine ready in time.
This technology is not a reliability upgrade anyway. They are not fixing anything. They are adding performance due to new technology that is being activated.