chrisc90 wrote: ↑14 May 2025, 10:27
Begs the question of are they trying to circumvent the FIA inspection routines (with the dots) if that’s the only camera available.
If that’s the only camera that monitors the rear wing, then it’s incredibly shady
Where did the idea that McLaren is attempting any foul play with gyro cameras on their rear-view onboards to hide wing flex come from?
Crucially, teams don't choose the official onboard camera hardware, as that's dictated by FOM/FIA, who have been testing and implementing gyro cameras across various cars since 2024, likely as an ongoing evaluation before a full adaptation of the technology next year. It started with only a couple of cars last year, but this season a lot more are using them.
While teams can use their own cameras in free practice for engineering/testing purposes, they don't control the official broadcast cameras. They can only add extra ones.
Aside from that, the FIA doesn't use the onboard cameras for tests. Whenever extra scrutineering is required, they install additional sensors/cameras for monitoring purposes. It doesn't matter what the live feed shows.