I hope this is the correct subforum for this. Please move it otherwise.
I was wondering what "running out of fuel" will look like this year. I fear it won't be pretty. Have we seen the actual technical and sporting rues applying to this? Any "directives" added to them?
AFAIK, there are two ways of running out of fuel in the race for 2014. One is that the Gill sensor will count more than 100Kg from lights to flag. What exactly happens then? I assume it won't cut ignition or anything like that, will a red light shine in the cockpit? I know the driver and the team get readings from this sensor live, but chances are that they'll try to cut it very thin in some cases, and even an idling engine consumes some fuel, it is just a matter of time before someone uses 100.03Kg of fuel. The car will roll normally through the finish line and to the pits. If that car simply disqualified after the race? Is there a tolerance built in for errors in the sensor so that the actual limit is 100.5Kg or something like that? Not that it would change the potential problem...
The second one would be failing to deliver the 1 liter sample after the race. Now it is no longer acceptable to stop just on the grounds that "otherwise I wouldn't have the liter left in the tank", or am I wrong and this applies only for quali? In that case, the car that got it slightly wrong would cross the finish line normally, pit normally about 3 minutes later, and eventually fail to produce that liter and be disqualified, what, 10 minutes after the race end? 30 minutes later?
I hope I am missing something here, because otherwise I fear hat results won't be final until after the post race interviews, and that can't be good.
P.S. cynic note: Are there any news on the actual performance of the Gill sensors? On how they'll be allocated to the different cars? I can't wait for the first car to be disqualified on that 1 liter rule, or to actually run dry in the race, only for the team to go public and say, "well, we did put 107Kg of fuel in the car. We weighed it. So it is the sensor's fault".