2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

All that has to do with the power train, gearbox, clutch, fuels and lubricants, etc. Generally the mechanical side of Formula One.
saviour stivala
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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When the MGU-K is recovering energy, the car is decelerating, the driver has lifted off throttle, and the driver is using the brakes. When a driver lifts off the throttle, the MGU-K switches to a generator, converting the car's kinetic energy into electrical energy to charge the battery. This greats a form of ''engine braking'' that helps decelerate the car. The car's electronic control unit (ECU) manages the split between the braking power from the MGU-K and the hydraulic brakes. This ensures that the total deceleration feel natural to the driver.

vorticism
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 13:00
it can recover some from the KE of the 120000 rpm turbocharger ....
being connected by induction gas and exhaust gas to the ICE/MGU-K combo called the PU
Eloquently said, it shows that you have an intuitive understanding of such tech. Yes, there should be some interaction between MGUK regen/deploy as it relates to WG, BOV, and throttle control maps, particularly now with the absence of the MGUH; but this is above my pay grade. Maybe the contributions are too minimal, and the lag of the medium too great.

Pressure and RPM controls do regardless become much different sans MGUH. Reliance on BOV and WG seems to become greater, but maybe the ICE itself is being made to cope with variations in those metrics, via fueling & ignition, as an additional safety. When fuel or ignition are controlled at tenths to hundredths of a cycle resolution, is overboost still an issue?

saviour stivala
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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wuzak wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 16:30
saviour stivala wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 04:38
With the removal of the MGU-H in 2026, the energy recovery system will no longer recover energy from the turbocharger's heat. This will put exclusive reliance on breaking as the only source of energy recovery, recovery will be from kinetic energy captured by MGU-K during braking.
The MGUK recovers energy by braking the ICE, but that does not mean it is braking the car, or that the driver is braking.

The MGUK can be used to control the output of the PU to match the driver's demand.
The MGU-K recovers energy by braking the ICE and that means it will be decelerating the car, for that to happen the driver would have lifted off throttle and is using the brake pedal. Yes, the MGU-K will be crucial for balancing and managing the ICE output, the MGU-K's power will be significantly increased to 350 kw, which is almost triple the current output, to compensate for the reduced power from the ICE. The MGU-K main roles will be to provide extra power for acceleration, particularly out of corners, and ensure a more balanced 50/50 spilt between electrical and ICE power. The current power unit split, is 80% ICE/20% electrical. In short in 2026 the MGU-K will be the primary source of power with its deployment potentially limited by factors like car speed. To recover energy, the MGU-K will continue to recover kinetic energy from braking and cornering to store in battery.

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dren
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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saviour stivala wrote:
30 Oct 2025, 05:59
wuzak wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 16:30
saviour stivala wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 04:38
With the removal of the MGU-H in 2026, the energy recovery system will no longer recover energy from the turbocharger's heat. This will put exclusive reliance on breaking as the only source of energy recovery, recovery will be from kinetic energy captured by MGU-K during braking.
The MGUK recovers energy by braking the ICE, but that does not mean it is braking the car, or that the driver is braking.

The MGUK can be used to control the output of the PU to match the driver's demand.
The MGU-K recovers energy by braking the ICE and that means it will be decelerating the car, for that to happen the driver would have lifted off throttle and is using the brake pedal. Yes, the MGU-K will be crucial for balancing and managing the ICE output, the MGU-K's power will be significantly increased to 350 kw, which is almost triple the current output, to compensate for the reduced power from the ICE. The MGU-K main roles will be to provide extra power for acceleration, particularly out of corners, and ensure a more balanced 50/50 spilt between electrical and ICE power. The current power unit split, is 80% ICE/20% electrical. In short in 2026 the MGU-K will be the primary source of power with its deployment potentially limited by factors like car speed. To recover energy, the MGU-K will continue to recover kinetic energy from braking and cornering to store in battery.
What happens when the ICE puts out 400kw and the MGUK brakes the ICE with 150kw?
Honda!

wuzak
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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saviour stivala wrote:
30 Oct 2025, 05:59
wuzak wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 16:30
saviour stivala wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 04:38
With the removal of the MGU-H in 2026, the energy recovery system will no longer recover energy from the turbocharger's heat. This will put exclusive reliance on breaking as the only source of energy recovery, recovery will be from kinetic energy captured by MGU-K during braking.
The MGUK recovers energy by braking the ICE, but that does not mean it is braking the car, or that the driver is braking.

The MGUK can be used to control the output of the PU to match the driver's demand.
The MGU-K recovers energy by braking the ICE and that means it will be decelerating the car, for that to happen the driver would have lifted off throttle and is using the brake pedal. Yes, the MGU-K will be crucial for balancing and managing the ICE output, the MGU-K's power will be significantly increased to 350 kw, which is almost triple the current output, to compensate for the reduced power from the ICE. The MGU-K main roles will be to provide extra power for acceleration, particularly out of corners, and ensure a more balanced 50/50 spilt between electrical and ICE power. The current power unit split, is 80% ICE/20% electrical. In short in 2026 the MGU-K will be the primary source of power with its deployment potentially limited by factors like car speed. To recover energy, the MGU-K will continue to recover kinetic energy from braking and cornering to store in battery.
Under your system, recovery will be about 1 - 1.25 times the battery capacity at most circuits, whereas teh allowable is a bit over 2 times the battery capacity.

I would think, therefore, that any time the ICE is capable of producing more power than the driver demands (ie part throttle) the MGUK will be generating.

Similar to what dren posted, if the driver demads 350kW but the ICE can produce 400kW, the ICE will produce the 400kW and the MGUK will recover 50kW to meet the driver's demand.

Also, as I have shown many times, the rules specify that the MGUK output can be reduced from +350kW to -250kW when the driver is at full throttle.

When the driver demand is above the potential ICE output, the MGUK will have to deploy, even at part throttle, subject to battery state of charge and speed ramp down rules.

mzso
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Mattchu wrote:
22 Oct 2025, 19:10
saviour stivala wrote:
20 Oct 2025, 18:56
Braking will be the only way to recover energy in 2026. The battery (ES) can only be charged by braking. But the brakes will not be the only way to slow down the car.
Why do keep repeating this when its been shown by many to be complete horseshit!

The car can harvest electrical energy without the brake pedal being touched. The teams do it now, this from Honda:

Looking at MGU-K and MGU-H usage by driving situation, the MGU-K is fully used during deceleration to recover kinetic energy, while the MGU-H is used to recover energy at the same time. What this specifically means is that exhaust temperature is intentionally allowed to increase when off-throttle to allow recovery of the heat energy from the exhaust gas and storage in the ES. The team developing this control technology have termed it Additional Harvest Power, or AHP.

Under partial throttle when starting to exit a corner, a different control technology called partial recovery is employed. It is used to generate electricity by diverting excess output to the MGU-K after the engine generates enough output to meet the driver’s needs. Both AHP and partial recovery consume extra fuel, but this control technology was planned and implemented because increasing energy recovery and storing it in the ES to increase the amount of energy used for MGU-K assist achieves a greater performance gain than what could be achieved through fuel consumption alone.
https://global.honda/en/tech/motorsport ... train_ESS/

Great posts by wuzak and diffuser explain it very well...
Maybe I just don't have the ear for it, but shouldn't this be evident in the engine noise?
Well, it should be far more noticeable next year.

Tommy Cookers
Tommy Cookers
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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saviour stivala wrote:
29 Oct 2025, 13:44
Doubling the amount of energy that can be recovered per lap to 8.5 megajoules, this will require drivers to use new braking strategies to efficiently charge the battery, as the system will have a higher power output of up to 350 kw.
what 'new braking strategies' ??

at speed ....
350 kW is about 1 g deceleration - this uses less than 30% of the rear tyre grip
so the brakes add another 3 g' deceleration - this uses the rest of the tyre grip
the 2-state aero will select the high DF/high drag state on braking

'efficiently charging the battery' would cap deceleration at 1 g (prolonging the braking to prolong the generation)
that would give us a weird battery-charging contest instead of a motor race

the 2014 rules turned out to be commendably ingenious - and so will the 2026 rules


btw
under the '95% efficiency' rule the rear tyres will drive at c.370 kW the '350 kW' generation
that's c. 500 horsepower

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diffuser
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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mzso wrote:
31 Oct 2025, 02:17
Mattchu wrote:
22 Oct 2025, 19:10
saviour stivala wrote:
20 Oct 2025, 18:56
Braking will be the only way to recover energy in 2026. The battery (ES) can only be charged by braking. But the brakes will not be the only way to slow down the car.
Why do keep repeating this when its been shown by many to be complete horseshit!

The car can harvest electrical energy without the brake pedal being touched. The teams do it now, this from Honda:

Looking at MGU-K and MGU-H usage by driving situation, the MGU-K is fully used during deceleration to recover kinetic energy, while the MGU-H is used to recover energy at the same time. What this specifically means is that exhaust temperature is intentionally allowed to increase when off-throttle to allow recovery of the heat energy from the exhaust gas and storage in the ES. The team developing this control technology have termed it Additional Harvest Power, or AHP.

Under partial throttle when starting to exit a corner, a different control technology called partial recovery is employed. It is used to generate electricity by diverting excess output to the MGU-K after the engine generates enough output to meet the driver’s needs. Both AHP and partial recovery consume extra fuel, but this control technology was planned and implemented because increasing energy recovery and storing it in the ES to increase the amount of energy used for MGU-K assist achieves a greater performance gain than what could be achieved through fuel consumption alone.
https://global.honda/en/tech/motorsport ... train_ESS/

Great posts by wuzak and diffuser explain it very well...
Maybe I just don't have the ear for it, but shouldn't this be evident in the engine noise?
Well, it should be far more noticeable next year.
That just sounds to me like, in that situation, they're not allowing any of the exhaust to by pass the turbo for the first paragraph.

In the second paragraph they're just leaving the MGU-K in generate mode till the power requirements exceeds what the ICE can deploy without the MGU-K.