ValeVida46 wrote:It really is a simple process that would take 30 minutes for the entire grid. Don't take my word for it, Gunther Steiner literally came out and said it today. (I've posted this already in another thread but will do so again here)
Each car is disassembled before transportation, and this can be done with 5 scrutineers in 10 teams pit garages if you want to reduce the time even further.
So that's 30 minutes for one check. One check out of plenty of checks that has to be done. I'd recommend checking out the full scrutineering report - it's easy to forget how many checks they actually do.
I don't trust Steiner on this. He's a biased source, and he's not doing the scrutineering. Also, the FIA is saying they don't have the time for it. So that's two "credible" sources stating opposite things.
But let's assume for a second you're right, and the FIA with a few extra people can do this on 15-20 min for all cars. What about the next time a car is disqualified for another check that isn't done on all cars (say, a 3D scan, and the component doesn't fit the CAD). Are we also gonna make every car go through that check every time? And the next check? And then we continue that pattern until every test that it's currently random is mandatory for all cars , and Parc Ferme is suddenly extended by a day.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that this is not a sustainable road to go down. This is a pure recency bias thing, because two cars failed the test. Next time it's something else, and we'll go through the exact same discussion again about all cars should be checked for that particular test.