Holm86 wrote: ↑08 Jan 2026, 21:16
f1316 wrote: ↑08 Jan 2026, 20:53
It’s insane to me that the same people who were aghast that Ferrari could be running a higher fuel flow outside the times it was being measured could think that having a higher compression ratio outside the time it is measured is perfectly ok. Either they’re both bad or they’re both ok but fundamentally running to the measurement and not the regulation is the same in both cases.
It was very literal in the regulations that the fuel flow must never exceed 100kg/h.
Tricking the sensors WAS cheating.
The 2026 regulations does not say that the compression ratio must be 16:1 at all times, only at ambient temperature.
So no, it's not comparable, at all
I don’t have the precise regulations in front of me but I think you’re wrong that it states anything about ambient temperature. Ambient temperature is the measure not the regulation. The Race describes it as follows:
For the new power units that are coming, the regulations dictate that the compression ratio in a cylinder can be no higher than 16.0.
Presuming this is a good summary of the regs, “can be no higher than” means at all times, not only at ambient temperatures. They don’t have a good system of measurement for at all times and it is regulated how the measurement will take place - so the teams can indeed work backwards from that to decide what the limitations are - but the same is true if the fuel flow sensor only measures at defined intervals.
Edit: per Gemini, The exact wording of the relevant part of Article C5.4.3 of the 2026 Formula 1 Power Unit Technical Regulations is:
"No cylinder of the engine may have a geometric compression ratio higher than 16.0."
This says nothing about ambient temperature and absolutely means at all times, the same as the fuel flow regulation. So this confirms my point.
Philosophically this is totally the same.