Yeah, I mean its not like the FIA are inconsistent or anything....
I do think its quite funny that McLaren got the largest fine in sport for being in possession of another teams aero details, yet this year Ferrari have built their whole 2016 campaign by (quite openly) doing the same thing .
Motorsport.com said:"I don't think that they operated outside of the regulations," said Wolff. "I think Ferrari/Haas interpreted the rules in the right way, and it wasn't for us to seek clarification of the past.
"We just wanted to be rock solid for the future, for us mainly. And, in the way we did it, for everybody to have that transparent information."
When asked by Motorsport.com if he believed Ferrari had gained an advantage through what it did, Wolff said: "I don't know.
"This is a sport about gaining advantage and if they gained an advantage by interpreting the rules like they did then 'chapeau'. They deserve it."
Yeah, I mean its not like the FIA are inconsistent or anything....
I do think its quite funny that McLaren got the largest fine in sport for being in possession of another teams aero details, yet this year Ferrari have built their whole 2016 campaign by (quite openly) doing the same thing .
Its not that different when you boil it down though. One team has another teams data. Simple as that. McLaren weren't fined for theft, they were fined for being in possession.
The difference is just that Haas aren't yet considered a team.
Its not that different when you boil it down though. One team has another teams data. Simple as that. McLaren weren't fined for theft, they were fined for being in possession.
The difference is just that Haas aren't yet considered a team. The cynic in me says why don't someone like McLaren just log an entry for 2017 for a new team called "McLaren 2", run 5 wind tunnels 24/7 for all of next year, and then mysteriously be 'unable' to make it to the grid in 2017 and leave all their aero data on McLaren's desk on their way out...
Really? That the only difference in the situations that you could spot?
Would McLaren have even have been deemed to break the rules had they done the exact same thing but with Lola data, for example? Probably not.
Well this is clearly going around and around so I will just leave it here and state the my point is simply this:
Being in possession of another teams data = Not Ok
Being in possession of another teams data when they are not currently competing = Ok
The latter is actually going to be banned next year anyway, as following Mercedes clarification request (which is basically the above), the FIA have closed the rules to stop people doing what Ferrari/Haas did.
Yay, a team survives.
Dam, it has Maldonado in it.