Giblet wrote:Changeable aerodynamic device, that has no moving parts, so it is legal, as the driver is not a part of a system according to the rules, even if they act as one.
It's not that simple. There are regulations that rule out what a driver can have an involvement in, but there are specific rules on aerodynamics that don't make any exceptions for driver involvement. There are also regulations that can cover not just the cause but also the effect that any system can have on aerodynamics and where. Naturally, there are exceptions for the front wing. What regulations take precedence? That's the issue here.
Will we get to have that tested? I'm not sure. It depends whether the teams around McLaren decide that it is providing them with an advantage that is getting them ahead of them, but it looks as if the system might well be useless as it stands. If other teams don't implement it then they might protest. McLaren have made compromises certainly on packaging and possibly in balance that might well make it counterproductive to reproduce, and they've spent all winter trying to measure the effect this one damn thing has. Referring back to discussion many pages back, it looks as if McLaren might not be that clever afterall.

If it was to get banned they will be well over a second behind with no straight line speed advantage.
We understand your points, and we are trying to move on, as since the system is now a legal part of the car, we have moved on, like I think it would be healthy for you to.
Move on to what, exactly? It's only now that a discussion can be feasibly had about it, and its effectiveness, now we have some certainty after pages of meaningless twaddle about it - which is where the proper discussion should have started.
If the system gets stuck in a corner, the driver adjust the throttle. If not he goes in the gravel, maybe hits a wall. Racing cars do that sometimes, simply by pilot error.
The notion that a driver can simply do something with the throttle if a system like this misbehaves is silly. Trying to deflect blame away from the system by saying that sometimes crashes happen of their own accord is.....ludicrous. The simple fact is that you don't know what effect it will have, McLaren don't, the FIA don't and neither does anyone else. Point made. That's why such systems that have differing effects on aerodynamics, and could suffer a large loss in downforce should they malfunction, have been banned in the past.
After pages, and separate threads, of meaningless twaddle on this system now that it is actually on a car and in a race the real discussion now stops? Well, if you work for McLaren I can understand why this thread might now be rather silent.
