Renault pursuing F1 appeal to make copying rules "crystal clear"
Renault Formula 1 boss Cyril Abiteboul insists that the team is pursuing its appeal in the Racing Point brake ducts case in order to make the rules “crystal clear.”
Esteban Ocon, Renault F1 Team R.S.20, Lance Stroll, Racing Point RP20
Charles Coates / Motorsport Images
Renault protested the brake duct design of the Racing Points after the Styrian, Hungarian and British GPs.
Following a hearing at Silverstone, the FIA stewards delivered their verdict before the 70th Anniversary GP, handing Racing Point a €400,000 fine and docking the team 15 points for using a design provided by Mercedes.
However, the team is allowed to use the contentious brake ducts for the balance of the season, while receiving a reprimand at every race.
Renault and Ferrari both subsequently lodged an appeal, while McLaren and Williams initially indicated an intention to do so, but later withdrew.
The FIA has announced that it will address the copying issue and ensure that F1 remains a championship for constructors, even noting that it will stop the use of photography and other reverse engineering techniques
However, Abiteboul hopes that the International Court of Appeal will provide further clarity on the subject.
“What we are seeking since the start of that process, it’s not a legal outcome, it’s not a degradation of the relationship between teams or team principals in the paddock,” he said.
“It’s really some answers to a situation, to a precedent that has been set, a disruption that has been brought into the sport, and that’s what we’re after. We don’t think we have a clear resolution to that as of yet.
“We’ve been at the start of that process. We want to make sure we lead that process until there is a crystal clear outcome that cannot be turned around once things are settled.
“I’m not talking about a legal settlement: I’m talking about settlement in general. We want in particular satisfaction that the rules will be changed.”
Abiteboul acknowledged that the FIA has promised that it will address the issue.
“We have indication that it will be the case – but until it is the case, in that environment we know that you can’t back off. So that is what we are after.
“We are expecting that F1 confirms again that it is a sport for constructors. Not just OEM, but constructors that design the whole car, that create the whole aerodynamic concept, and that each car is its own aerodynamic concept. That’s what we are after.
"We appreciate that the rules are not clear, and that’s what we are seeking from the process.”
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