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Williams investigating why own scans said new F1 floor was legal

Williams is seeking answers as to why its own pre-event scans of its updated Formula 1 car suggested its revised floor complied with the regulations.

Alex Albon was disqualified from his eighth spot on the grid at the Dutch Grand Prix after an area of his floor – believed to be in front of the rear tyres – was deemed to be too wide to comply with the volume rules.

The FIA verdict on the floor – which emerged in post-qualifying scrutineering – came as a shock to Williams because it had checked the measurements of its upgraded car several times before and believed it was fully in line with the limits.

However, despite the team's own readings saying that the new floor was legal, all that matters is what the FIA’s own measurements state – and the governing body's calibrated scanner deemed the new floor outside the rules.

Speaking in a video post on Sunday morning, Williams team principal James Vowles explained how the FIA reading had caught his team by surprise.

“It's not the first time we've been scanned,” explained Vowles. “We've obviously been following and complying to all of these procedures since they were brought into place several years ago, and haven't been found in excess until now.

James Vowles, Team Principal, Williams Racing, speaks with teammates on the pit wall (Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images)

“We use scanning techniques now rather than physical measuring techniques, because it's not just one point that you have to be aware of - its heights and widths all across some quite complex shapes.

“Before we came here, we have scanned the floor and the car multiple times. It happened back at the factory in isolation with the floor. It happened back at the factory on the car. It happened here on Thursday as well.

“We did demonstrate all of these results to the FIA, which indicate that our floor is within the legal compliance. But what matters is the adjudication of the FIA, their measurements and their systems, and that we entirely accept.”

Vowles said there was no immediate answer as to why there was a disparity between its readings and those of the FIA – but adapting the floor to be fully legal was not a complicated matter.

“What we now need to do is understand how we could have been wrong in our own measurements, and what we need to change in terms of process,” he said.

“With immediate effect, there's only one area of the car that we were not compliant with, and it's an easy fix. But irrespective, the rule is the rule, and it's black and white.”

Alex Albon, Williams FW46 (Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images)

Vowles said the team took full responsibility for what had happened, but remained confident about the potential of the car.

“We cannot spend hours of work developing an update kit, and we cannot ask our drivers to put everything on the line in order to secure points-scoring positions, to then throw it away with not being completely there on every single boundary of the regulation,” he added.

“There's no one really accountable for that but ourselves. That's on our shoulders. No one else outside of that has any responsibility. We need to address and get on top of that with immediate effect.

“We still have this race weekend, where I feel we have a strong enough car to be able to fight through the field. I'm excited by the prospects for today, because the car remains quick, and we have an opportunity in the race and beyond.

“Then we have nine more races where we have to deliver time and time again with perfection in order to score points and fight our way up the championship.

“This isn't the standard I want us to hold ourselves to this weekend, but let's now make a process change to ensure that it doesn't happen again.”

The team has been able to make a revision to the new floor so that it now complies with regulations.

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