Former champions Renault questioned the
legality of their rivals' Mercedes-lookalike cars after last
weekend's Styrian Grand Prix in Austria.
"I think for us it’s important to clarify... what is permissible
and what isn’t for this season," Budkowski told reporters in a
video news conference at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
"But also what Formula One we want in the future. What is the
model we want?
"Is it permissible to get parts or get geometries from another
team and use them on your car or not -- because we don’t think
that’s the right model for F1 in the future. It’s really beyond
the protest, beyond this race."
Canadian-owned Racing Point, who use Mercedes engines and
gearboxes, have made no secret of copying last year's winning
Mercedes but say they followed rules that teams must design
certain listed parts for themselves.
The protest focuses on the Racing Point brake ducts, and a
comparison with those on last year's Mercedes.
A decision is unlikely for several weeks but Racing Point
principal Otmar Szafnauer was confident his team's case was
'bulletproof'.
"There are things that the camera can't see, especially the
internal surfaces of a brake duct, for example, that we
completely designed and developed ourselves," he said.
The controversy has also revived a long-standing debate about
'customer cars' - ones provided by a constructor for another
team to race.
McLaren team boss Andreas Seidl spoke earlier of the risk of
Formula One becoming 'a copying championship' with only two or
three real constructors rather than 10 independent ones.
Christian Horner, boss of Red Bull Racing which also has
AlphaTauri as a junior team, said the outcome of the protest
would "dictate strategies for different teams for next year. So
a lot weighs on that.
"The FIA just need to say yes they're fine with it or obviously
no, they're not. A ruling on that sooner rather than later for
all teams would be beneficial."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London; Editing by Ken Ferris)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|