Wolfe2x7
This sounds like a load of bull to me -- I mean, how can you
not expect a thin piece of bodywork to bend downward while being subjected to loads of downforce...?
Methinks the requests for revised wings from the teams are either an overblown reaction to a simple fact (the wings on F1 cars are going to move a little), or a cover-up for the stupidity of making a fuss over the wings in the first place...
Well, firstly, the regulation states that the bodywork must not move. If a "thin piece of bodywork [bends] downward while being subjected to loads of downforce", then clearly it's not thick enough. You can't rewrite the rules just because someone makes a part that's not strong enough.
I'm not sure that you understand the point of flexing wings. It's a very definite advantage to have a wing that flexes because it can use the airflow to optimise the drag/downforce/speed performance. It's an area of experimentation that the FIA have long sought to cut off, hence Article 3.15 in the Technical Regulations.
kylehnat
The FIA really needs to do a better job at writing regulations. Many of the rules are fuzzy and open to interpretation. I bet you could find an "illegal" part on each and every car on the grid, yet each of these cars passes inspection every race. When it comes right down to it, the legality or illegality of a car is determined by one person's interpretation of the technical regulations. The rules need to be black and white, and right now they're green. One thing that NASCAR does right is its template system for inspecting cars. If a part of the car does not fit the template, you're disqualified
NASCAR is a completely different kettle of fish. The Template model wouldn't work for F1 because the aero pieces are subject to much greater forces. Indeed, this current controversy is absolutely
because an in-garage method of scrutineering is incapable (at current levels) of accurately measuring on-track behaviour. Using a Template to measure wing construction would be exactly the same. Plus, as you allude, NASCAR is widely suspected not to be especially consistent with its application of the rules.
F1 is a sport that's intended to allow flexibility in car design, because this facilitates the season-long development that keeps different cars competitive. NASCAR operates much more as a spec-formula than this, and its rules are configured to prevent development. As to whether you could "find an illegal part on every car on the grid", well, you would definitely be able to find cars with parts that are outside of the spirit of the rules, but this is a sport which is attracting the very finest minds available. If they didn't push the boundaries, they wouldn't be doing their jobs, and they would be losing out to those who were.
F1 is an arms race between the aerodynamicists/engineers and the governing body, and always has been.