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.
mzso
mzso
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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wuzak wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 02:21
mzso wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 01:57
I guess I badly misremember then. So that's even more incentive to regen while turning, all the time.
Which I expect is a motivation towards ultra high rpm MGUs, so they can be reasonably efficient with low ICE rpm as well. (I do remember right that there can be a gear ratio between the ICE and the MGU, right?)
Maximum MGUK speed is limited.

C5.18.5 The relative rotational speed between any two parts of the MGU-K may not exceed 60,000rpm.
That's still a lot. Not sure how broad the high efficiency are of the MGU can be mad in generator mode though. But I expect it would be rather high if the RPM won't drop too low.
gruntguru wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 03:22
mzso wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 01:37
wuzak wrote:
06 Nov 2025, 11:44
Why would the rpms increase when the driver lifts off/brushes the brakes and the MGUK is recovering energy?
What is the source of this "new for 2026 rules allowing energy recovery when cornering"?
How would that even be possible? The car would just speed up...
True. The driver will need to select a gear that creates appropriate rpm through the corner to meet his harvesting requirements. e.g. if maximum harvesting is required, they will have to corner in a gear that sets the rpm above 10,500.
With the motor being allowed to be geared to 60k rpm, I don't think it needs to be that extreme. But I guess they will tune the gearbox and motor to stay in a high-ish RPM range in most turns.

mzso
mzso
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Joined: 05 Apr 2014, 14:52

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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wuzak wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 18:37
karana wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 17:41
wuzak wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 15:25


Not yet, as far as I am aware.
There most probably won't be one, considering there already is no limit since 2022. (Btw, the 15k rev limit was also removed for 2022)
Hadn't noticed that.

I'm guessing that is because neither limit was being used.
I don't remember the limit being removed from the regs. Though maybe he means, that it's never reached in practice.

wuzak
wuzak
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Joined: 30 Aug 2011, 03:26

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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mzso wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 16:18
wuzak wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 02:21
mzso wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 01:57
I guess I badly misremember then. So that's even more incentive to regen while turning, all the time.
Which I expect is a motivation towards ultra high rpm MGUs, so they can be reasonably efficient with low ICE rpm as well. (I do remember right that there can be a gear ratio between the ICE and the MGU, right?)
Maximum MGUK speed is limited.

C5.18.5 The relative rotational speed between any two parts of the MGU-K may not exceed 60,000rpm.
That's still a lot. Not sure how broad the high efficiency are of the MGU can be mad in generator mode though. But I expect it would be rather high if the RPM won't drop too low.
gruntguru wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 03:22
mzso wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 01:37

How would that even be possible? The car would just speed up...
True. The driver will need to select a gear that creates appropriate rpm through the corner to meet his harvesting requirements. e.g. if maximum harvesting is required, they will have to corner in a gear that sets the rpm above 10,500.
With the motor being allowed to be geared to 60k rpm, I don't think it needs to be that extreme. But I guess they will tune the gearbox and motor to stay in a high-ish RPM range in most turns.
The ICE speed would have to be at or above 10,500rpm to maximise harvesting.

Though that does depend on the driver power demand.

The rule quoted by Grunt above limits fuel flow at part throttle based on driver demand.

mzso
mzso
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Joined: 05 Apr 2014, 14:52

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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wuzak wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 17:12
mzso wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 16:18
wuzak wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 02:21


Maximum MGUK speed is limited.

C5.18.5 The relative rotational speed between any two parts of the MGU-K may not exceed 60,000rpm.
That's still a lot. Not sure how broad the high efficiency are of the MGU can be mad in generator mode though. But I expect it would be rather high if the RPM won't drop too low.
gruntguru wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 03:22
True. The driver will need to select a gear that creates appropriate rpm through the corner to meet his harvesting requirements. e.g. if maximum harvesting is required, they will have to corner in a gear that sets the rpm above 10,500.
With the motor being allowed to be geared to 60k rpm, I don't think it needs to be that extreme. But I guess they will tune the gearbox and motor to stay in a high-ish RPM range in most turns.

The ICE speed would have to be at or above 10,500rpm to maximise harvesting.


Though that does depend on the driver power demand.

The rule quoted by Grunt above limits fuel flow at part throttle based on driver demand.
Why?

wuzak
wuzak
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Joined: 30 Aug 2011, 03:26

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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mzso wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 17:29
wuzak wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 17:12
mzso wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 16:18

That's still a lot. Not sure how broad the high efficiency are of the MGU can be mad in generator mode though. But I expect it would be rather high if the RPM won't drop too low.


With the motor being allowed to be geared to 60k rpm, I don't think it needs to be that extreme. But I guess they will tune the gearbox and motor to stay in a high-ish RPM range in most turns.

The ICE speed would have to be at or above 10,500rpm to maximise harvesting.


Though that does depend on the driver power demand.

The rule quoted by Grunt above limits fuel flow at part throttle based on driver demand.
Why?
Fuel flow.

As I said, it depends on driver demand.

At driver demand of 218kW the maximum fuel flow can be achieved with C5.2.5. But that can also only be achieved from 10,500rpm and above.

If the rpm is lower, the fuel flow is restricted by C5.2.4.

If the engine is at 9,500rpm it will have approximately 36kW less power than if it is at 10,500rpm (based on 48% TE).

So, at 10,500rpm, the ICE delivers 400kW, the MGUK harvests 182kW to match the driver demand of 218kW.
At 9,500rpm, the ICE delivers 364kW, the MGUK harvests 146kW to match the driver demand of 218kW.

A reduction of approximatley 20% of harvesting power for a reduction of fuel flow of 9%.

If they used 9,500rpm for harvesting at that part throttle demand they would need more fuel for a race distance.
Last edited by wuzak on 08 Nov 2025, 19:10, edited 1 time in total.

karana
karana
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Joined: 06 Dec 2019, 21:13

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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mzso wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 16:24
wuzak wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 18:37
karana wrote:
07 Nov 2025, 17:41


There most probably won't be one, considering there already is no limit since 2022. (Btw, the 15k rev limit was also removed for 2022)
Hadn't noticed that.

I'm guessing that is because neither limit was being used.
I don't remember the limit being removed from the regs. Though maybe he means, that it's never reached in practice.
By saying the limits were removed I mean that the rules limiting fuel load and revs don't exist anymore since 2022.

vorticism
vorticism
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Joined: 01 Mar 2022, 20:20

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Just noticed that another thing changing '25-'26 is spark count. Currently five "per engine cycle" per cylinder are permitted. In '26 only one is permitted. Was/is "cycle" meant as a full engine cycle (720* crank rotation) or as a stroke (180* crank rotation)?

saviour stivala
saviour stivala
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Joined: 25 Apr 2018, 12:54

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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vorticism wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 18:27
Just noticed that another thing changing '25-'26 is spark count. Currently five "per engine cycle" per cylinder are permitted. In '26 only one is permitted. Was/is "cycle" meant as a full engine cycle (720* crank rotation) or as a stroke (180* crank rotation)?
720 degrees of crankshaft rotation is considered as a complete cycle for a four-stroke cycle each cylinder (intake, compression, power and exhaust). The new for 2026 change from five sparks to one per cycle means that a single spark will now initiate each power stroke.

gruntguru
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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720*
je suis charlie

mzso
mzso
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Joined: 05 Apr 2014, 14:52

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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vorticism wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 18:27
Just noticed that another thing changing '25-'26 is spark count. Currently five "per engine cycle" per cylinder are permitted. In '26 only one is permitted. Was/is "cycle" meant as a full engine cycle (720* crank rotation) or as a stroke (180* crank rotation)?
What does this even mean? Why even regulate it?
What would five sparks compared to one would achieve?

Tommy Cookers
Tommy Cookers
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Joined: 17 Feb 2012, 16:55

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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mzso wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:00
vorticism wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 18:27
Just noticed that another thing changing '25-'26 is spark count. Currently five "per engine cycle" per cylinder are permitted. In '26 only one is permitted....
... What would five sparks compared to one would achieve?
(given that there's 5 permitted fueling events)
extra gas could be made late in the stroke - increasing MGU-H made electricity rather than ICE power
maybe other effects
Honda had a name for the increased electricity

karana
karana
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Joined: 06 Dec 2019, 21:13

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:19
mzso wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:00
vorticism wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 18:27
Just noticed that another thing changing '25-'26 is spark count. Currently five "per engine cycle" per cylinder are permitted. In '26 only one is permitted....
... What would five sparks compared to one would achieve?
(given that there's 5 permitted fueling events)
extra gas could be made late in the stroke - increasing MGU-H made electricity rather than ICE power
maybe other effects
Honda had a name for the increased electricity
Based on this, are we sure 'engine power' in
C5.2.5 At partial load, the fuel energy flow must not exceed the limit curve defined below:
EF (MJ/h) = 380 when the engine power is equal to or below −50kW
EF (MJ/h) = 9.78 x engine power (kW) + 869 when the engine power is above −50kW
really refers to the PU power?

vorticism
vorticism
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Joined: 01 Mar 2022, 20:20

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:19
mzso wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:00
vorticism wrote:
08 Nov 2025, 18:27
Just noticed that another thing changing '25-'26 is spark count. Currently five "per engine cycle" per cylinder are permitted. In '26 only one is permitted....
... What would five sparks compared to one would achieve?
(given that there's 5 permitted fueling events)
extra gas could be made late in the stroke - increasing MGU-H made electricity rather than ICE power
maybe other effects
Honda had a name for the increased electricity
I thought this was the case, too, but I don't find any references to fuel injection limits in the '25 nor '26 regs. Seems like only the overall fuel pressure and flow rate are defined. As it relates, some of you probably already know, but peak permitted fuel pressure is currently 500 bar and will reduce to 350 bar in '26.

If one spark per cycle truly means one spark per 4-stroke cycle, then both the fueling and ignition should be typical. 'Cycle' is sometimes used in place of 'stroke,' perhaps erroneously as 'cycle' implies something cyclical i.e. returning to a starting point. I thought it was more common tongue, colloquial parlance, but even wikipedia has it in the first sentence of their associated article. So if you can argue it before the FIA, would you not then have optionally 1 spark per stroke & unregulated fuel injection (puff, squirt, mist...) timing & duration?

User avatar
BassVirolla
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Joined: 20 Jul 2018, 23:55

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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karana wrote:
10 Nov 2025, 16:19
Tommy Cookers wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:19
mzso wrote:
09 Nov 2025, 21:00

... What would five sparks compared to one would achieve?
(given that there's 5 permitted fueling events)
extra gas could be made late in the stroke - increasing MGU-H made electricity rather than ICE power
maybe other effects
Honda had a name for the increased electricity
Based on this, are we sure 'engine power' in
C5.2.5 At partial load, the fuel energy flow must not exceed the limit curve defined below:
EF (MJ/h) = 380 when the engine power is equal to or below −50kW
EF (MJ/h) = 9.78 x engine power (kW) + 869 when the engine power is above −50kW
really refers to the PU power?
It has to.

An ICE should not achieve a negative power (known as engine braking) while burning any fuel.

If fuel is burnt, a positive power is produced by the ICE.

If MGUK recovers more than the ICE is outputting, it amounts to a negative power.

This wording of the rules is, at least, not fully conclusive, but any other interpretation would be anti lag (burning fuel with exhaust valve fully open and no power being extracted by the ICE).

gruntguru
gruntguru
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Joined: 21 Feb 2009, 07:43

Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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As I mentioned in an earlier post there are a couple of instances where the Tech Regs use the term "engine power" which can easily confuse since the PU as a whole is not strictly an "engine". The ICE is an engine and the PU as a whole is an engine - hybrid-transmission combination.
je suis charlie