venkyhere wrote: ↑25 Dec 2025, 15:14
what does all this really mean, from a 30k ft overview perspective ?
-
new 2026 era regulations, by increasing the share of battery power from 20% to 50% while keeping total power the same are
anyway going to make the cars slower - we can say this without doing any complex analysis and without reading a giant document describing the regulations. because the track layouts are going to remain the same.
IF we are to see same/similar laptimes
(given the overall weight reduction from previous era isn't huge), it points to an impossible 'IF', because :
(a) weight penalty of battery is prohibitive
&
(b) the opportunities to refill the battery with electrically recovered mechanical energy aren't numerous/long enough, neither efficient enough, to compensate for the electrical energy that would get 'used up' for even a decently paced race stint lap.
For example, lets say the 'PU system' is capable of 1000 units over a qualifying lap, lets see how much is possible over a race stint lap -
2014 to 2025 : 700(ICE)+100(battery) to the wheels, 100(ICE)+50(braking) to restore 100 units to the battery via MGU_K, ie to maintain electrical energy equilibrium while fuel supply is availabe 'unrestricted'
2026 onwards : 300(ICE)+200(battery) to the wheels, 200(ICE)+50(braking) to restore 200 units to the battery via MGU_K, ie to maintain electrical energy equilibrium while fuel supply is availabe 'unrestricted'.
Even though this example generously assumes the new MGU-K is going to be much superior in terms of efficiency in recharge mode (200/250 = 0.8 is an improvement over 100/150 = 0.66), we can clearly see that only 500 is sent to the wheels while 800 was sent to the wheels in the previous era.
The cars are going to be ridiculosuly slower(this is without even considering the fact that MGU-H a.k.a free energy, is completely gone now) or may be 'considerably slower' (severity reduced from 'ridiculous' owing to overall less heavy cars), over a race stint. Qualifying laps maybe faster , since there is no need to recharge the battery and the higher share of the 'faster source of energy' may be put to use.
In other words, it all boils down to the simple undergrad-level concept :
- energy density.
We can't yet match (forget surpass) the energy density of fossil fuel via an ion exchange system because, while both systems are essentially extracting energy from chemical bonds, the battery system needs to store all contributing chemicals, while the fuel system gets a portion of the 'chemical' from oxygen in air that comes 'free' without any storage required. Given the high energy conversion efficiency of super-optimized ICE used in F1, this 'energy density penalty' becomes really stark.