Racing Point and Ferrari - Illegal parts. Penalty comparison
Racing Point and Ferrari - Illegal parts. Penalty comparison
Author
Discussion

Troubleatmill

Original Poster:

10,210 posts

180 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Racing Point brake ducts found to be illegal.
15 points penalty
400,000 Euro fine

Ferrari run an illegal engine for the whole of a season.... and nothing.

How can this be?

SmoothCriminal

5,751 posts

220 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
FerrarI
International
Assistance

TheDeuce

30,808 posts

87 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
There is plenty to suggest Ferrari played ball with the FIA and Liberty by voting for/not vetoing certain regulation changes at around the same time they were given the soft serve closed door deal.

As a result of the regs changes (no engine dev) that Ferrari suddenly decided to go along with, they are effectively stuck with their duff car for two entire seasons.

It's all very shady but in the end the car they're stuck with is effectively Ferrari's penalty. All parties involved would have known that would be the outcome and subsequently the teams that initially complained about the closed door deal have subsequently ceased to pursue it. Everyone got what they wanted/deserved in the end.

Mr Pointy

12,754 posts

180 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Ferrari - have stop using the engine & are stuck with a dog of a car for two years

Racing Point - can bolt the offending rear brake ducts on today & go racing

TheDeuce

30,808 posts

87 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Yep - on balance I'm sure Ferrari would love to have just taken a 400k fine on the chin and keep their dodgy PU in the car!!


BoRED S2upid

20,913 posts

261 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
Ferrari - have stop using the engine & are stuck with a dog of a car for two years

Racing Point - can bolt the offending rear brake ducts on today & go racing
Pretty much that. What harsher penalty could there be? The pink Merc is still quick it’s hardly much of a penalty for them.

Swervin_Mervin

4,859 posts

259 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Troubleatmill said:
Racing Point brake ducts found to be illegal.
15 points penalty
400,000 Euro fine

Ferrari run an illegal engine for the whole of a season.... and nothing.

How can this be?
RP ducts aren't illegal. Slight difference. They comply with the Technical Regs.

TwentyFive

366 posts

87 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
I thought the fine was based on them not complying with the sporting regs as opposed to the technical regs.

The penalty is applied from the standpoint of how they were developed not that they are illegal to use.

If they were illegal they wouldn't be allowed to race with them this weekend.

WickerBill

905 posts

69 months

Friday 7th August 2020
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The Surveyor

7,617 posts

258 months

Friday 7th August 2020
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Does this end any further suggestions of RP copying Mercedes, and allow then to run the car for the rest of the season without further penalty, or is this specific to the brake ducts, and leave the door open for Renault to object to other components?

Aluminium

31 posts

77 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Renault and Mercedes both copied cars by legally taking over Lotus and Brawn racing respectively.

The extent to which a brake duct can be copyrighted is a grey area, in my view. If the claimed designer makes a claim that is worthy of attention, but is it really ethical for Renault to make a legal claim about Racing Point copying a ‘Mercedes’ design?

Swervin_Mervin

4,859 posts

259 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Aluminium said:
Renault and Mercedes both copied cars by legally taking over Lotus and Brawn racing respectively.

The extent to which a brake duct can be copyrighted is a grey area, in my view. If the claimed designer makes a claim that is worthy of attention, but is it really ethical for Renault to make a legal claim about Racing Point copying a ‘Mercedes’ design?
They didn't copy, they used a Merc design. And that's what's fallen foul of the regs

anonymous-user

75 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Aluminium said:
Renault and Mercedes both copied cars by legally taking over Lotus and Brawn racing respectively.

The extent to which a brake duct can be copyrighted is a grey area, in my view. If the claimed designer makes a claim that is worthy of attention, but is it really ethical for Renault to make a legal claim about Racing Point copying a ‘Mercedes’ design?
Of course it was ethical to protest that RP had cheated by breaking rules. The evidence was there and if it wasn’t them someone else would have done it.

It’s being suggested that further protests will now follow in respect of other components. Good luck to them, I hope they do and that they succeed.

To be honest they’ve screwed themselves. They haven’t made anywhere near the most of the car in the races so far this year and now just had 15points taken away. They won’t be able to do the same next year, 2022 will be very different, no “last years car” to inherit. They have a task of understanding the aerodynamic systems of this car, trying to develop it further and add performance. They needed to make the most of it at the start of this year, while everyone else develops new cars and overtakes them. They haven’t at all so a very very very expensive waste of “a head start”

The Hofff

247 posts

192 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Purchasing the Merc design of the brake ducts (front or rear) in 2019 was allowed, its now not as they have been added to the list of parts you are not allowed to buy the design of.

The front brake ducts were used on their 2019 car and hence why they are OK now, its only the rear ducts that are the issue

Racing point didnt have the rear brake ducts in use in 2019, they have now installed them (merc design) on the their 2020 car. If they had used them last year it would have been OK

If they have used their own design on a 2020 car it would have been OK


The Hofff

247 posts

192 months

Friday 7th August 2020
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....is my understanding of it all

kambites

70,420 posts

242 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
The Hofff said:
....is my understanding of it all
That's certainly what the BBC are saying.

ralphrj

3,915 posts

212 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
The Surveyor said:
Does this end any further suggestions of RP copying Mercedes, and allow then to run the car for the rest of the season without further penalty, or is this specific to the brake ducts, and leave the door open for Renault to object to other components?
I think that there is more to come. Few in the sport believe the official story that Racing Point copied the car from photographs (McLaren came unstuck trying to claim the same thing back in 2007).

Martin Brundle said:
To replicate a car that works, it is stretching my imagination on that.
Most think that Racing Point were either given detailed technical files or had access to the car.

davidd

6,659 posts

305 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
Troubleatmill said:
Racing Point brake ducts found to be illegal.
15 points penalty
400,000 Euro fine

Ferrari run an illegal engine for the whole of a season.... and nothing.

How can this be?
Ferrari didn't run an illegal engine, there exploited a loophole that was then closed (apparently and all that).

TwentyFive

366 posts

87 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
davidd said:
Ferrari didn't run an illegal engine, there exploited a loophole that was then closed (apparently and all that).
If that were true then there would have been no need for the whole saga to have all been conducted behind closed doors. I don't for a second believe it was a simple case of exploiting a loophole, there was far more to it than that and keeping it private does nothing to dispel the rumour.

FeelingLucky

1,161 posts

185 months

Friday 7th August 2020
quotequote all
TwentyFive said:
davidd said:
Ferrari didn't run an illegal engine, there exploited a loophole that was then closed (apparently and all that).
If that were true then there would have been no need for the whole saga to have all been conducted behind closed doors. I don't for a second believe it was a simple case of exploiting a loophole, there was far more to it than that and keeping it private does nothing to dispel the rumour.
I absolutely concur, clearly, there is much more to this, and Ferrari are, clearly, desperate to keep it quiet. So desperate in fact, that they've agreed to being hobbled (along with all their customers) for two seasons.