DanielPT wrote:Wizzie wrote:mario wrote:It looks like another team have already developed their own system - possibly Ferrari if they have been asking about the legality of the system - so there might not be as much to loose if they did patent it.
The hunch has been proven correct.
Looks like we'll be heading back to status quo very soon at this rate depending on whether this system actually makes that much of a difference
I expect FIA to ban the system somewhere in the mid season only to let the teams race it until the end of 2012 before banning it altogether.
You are probably right about that - the FIA eventually stepped in to ban active ride height systems back in the 1990's, and now that teams are developing what looks like a passive version of the same systems, it's probably only a matter of time before this is banned as well. On the other hand the FIA have allowed some passive suspension system, such as the hydraulically linked system that teams like Mercedes have been using on their cars to modify their behaviour in roll, whilst according to scarbsf1 Toyota had produced a system which modified the behaviour of the third spring under braking (albeit with a limited performance gain, which is probably why it is still permitted), so it isn't an entirely forgone conclusion that they'll bad such systems immediately.
Mind you, should the FIA feel inclined to ban such systems it looks like there are already existing clauses within the regulations which could be invoked, such as clause 10.2.3
10.2 Suspension geometry :
[...]
10.2.3 No adjustment may be made to the suspension system while the car is in motion.
It could be argued that the system they have developed falls foul of that clause if, as James Allen speculated, the system works to raise the front of the car under braking, since it implies that the front suspension geometry is being modified by this system. I wouldn't completely rule out the possibility that somebody challenged the legality of this system in the first race when scruitineering takes place - probably one of the smaller teams who won't have the resources to copy such a device easily.
Captain Hammer wrote:mario wrote:To be fair to Boullier it seems that the team itself were trying to keep this system under wraps
It was a mistake to run it at the young driver tests, precisely because this sort of thing could - and did - happen. I get that Lotus wanted to test it on a car that they fully unerstood to evaluate it, but what was stopping them from running it late in the winter tests? That would have kept the whole thing under wraps for longer, rather than seeing it leak out and giving the other teams nine weeks to make their own systems.
It seems that Renault might have been working on this system for a lot longer than we first thought - Autosport is reporting that Renault submitted this system to Charlie Whiting back in late 2010 with approval coming from Whiting in Jan 2011, and it is thought that Renault might have even been running this system back in the 2011 pre-season tests before mechanical problems forced them to push back development of this system. I wouldn't be surprised, therefore, if there hadn't already been a few rumours about this sort of system in the paddock before the Young Driver tests - even allowing for how quickly the teams can develop parts in F1, the Young Driver test was only about 8 weeks ago, and it would be fairly quick for a team to go from spotting an unknown mechanical device device, evaluating its function, replicating that and submitting the final conceptual design to Whiting.