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Haas hits out at rivals' "inconsistent" views on F1 rules

Haas Formula 1 team principal Gunther Steiner has hit out at rivals for being "inconsistent" in their views over the championship's rules.

Guenther Steiner, Team Principal, Haas F1

Guenther Steiner, Team Principal, Haas F1

Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

The extent of Haas and Ferrari collaboration as F1's newest team took advantage of the 'non-listed parts' possibilities of the rulebook has caused controversy since Haas arrived on the grid - with some rivals expressing concerns that it opened the door to 'B team' arrangements that would stymie the chances of 'true' constructors making their whole cars themselves.

But amid the debates over the 2021 rules and the possibility of more use of standard parts to save costs - an option unpopular with many - there is a new push for an 'open source' approach where teams would publish certain elements of their designs online for others to potential copy.

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Asked by Motorsport.com whether the enthusiasm in some quarters for this plan felt hypocritical to him, Steiner replied: "Yeah. I think there's a lot of inconsistency of what people think.

"It's like one day they think this; it's all done in the moment of what suits you, in my opinion.

"'We don't want you to buy parts, but if you put yours on and open source it, then maybe I copy it'. That confuses me.

"That's why I was always very relaxed about these things - it's like, 'Guys, we cannot just react to somebody performing better than somebody else and then try to hinder him and then open [it] up'.

"Because then if everybody uses the open-source parts and someone says, 'I cannot afford them so we should take open-source parts away' - at some stage we can make another 20 categories how to make these parts, and confuse everybody.

"I think we are confusing ourselves. We try to find a fix for it, but with each fix we create two more problems. And then we create two more fixes and have four more problems.

"At some stage, we don't know anymore what to check and what is what.

"Trying to explain this to people, how to do this, how this sport is done, it's getting quite difficult because sometimes I need to read all this abbreviations three or four times until I remember them."

He also pointed that out the open source idea could be limited because elements of one car's design could prove less effective would placed on an otherwise different design.

"We have to watch the consequences because all the parts which are on open source, they are holding onto something, they are connecting something," said Steiner.

"But I'm always for trying things - as long as we are prepared to try things and then to change them back where they are, it's good.

"We just don't need to be stubborn and say we try something and then we need to make sure what we did was right, to prove yourself right, because sometimes then you do the wrong thing."

Opponents of increased use of standard parts have claimed they could lead to a 'GP1' formula - a name inspired by one-make series such as GP2/3, now F2/F3 - in which cars are largely identical and development scope is severely limited.

"I always think we shouldn't go down the GP1 way because that is not in the DNA of Formula 1," Steiner added.

"Formula 1 lives off technology. At some stage, we go out of control - it's like everything. If you let too much freedom, it's just getting [to the point where] nobody can afford it anymore and there [is] where we are now.

"The budget cap should do a lot to help that one, but we cannot restrict it - that is not very constructive. We need to find middle ground."

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