saviour stivala wrote: ↑16 Jan 2026, 04:39
wuzak wrote: ↑16 Jan 2026, 02:27
saviour stivala wrote: ↑15 Jan 2026, 10:20
The term 'no deployment limit' is a simplification or potentially a misunderstanding of F1 2026 regulations. The system is designed to make energy management a critical strategic element of the racing, not a system with 'unlimited' power available at all times. There is no 'unlimited' deployment in the sense that the car can use maximum electric power at all times. Teams and drivers must carefully manage the available 4 mj battery capacity and the energy they can harvest each lap to optimize performance and prevent the battery from draining completely.
The "no deployment limit" means that there isn't a hard limit to deployment.
The previous rules set a limit of 4MJ deployment from the ES to the MGUK.
In 2026 they may be able to use extra energy for qualifying laps, or for overtaking.
In 2026 like in 2025 ES store capacity will be the same, which means that what goes to 'K' from ES store will be the same. As for possibility of using extra energy for qualifying or for overtake/defend, such possibilities were also there in 2025. In short, as long as they have sufficient battery charge they can use it like they did up to last year.
2025 allowed 2MJ recovery per lap and 4MJ deployment per lap between the ES and MGUK.
It didn't matter what the state of charge of the battery was at the beginning of the lap, the maximum that could be deployed in a lap, including qualifying.
In 2026, there is a maximum 8.5MJ per lap recovery allowed, 9MJ in a race when following another car within 1s.
So while the battery size is the same, the amount of energy that goes in and out of the battery is not.
Theoretically, the 2026 car can start a qualifying lap with a full battery, 4MJ, and recover and deploy 8.5MJ through the lap, for a maximum deployment of 12.5MJ.
In the race, 1s behind another car, potentially deploying 13MJ on a lap.
Practically speaking, in qualifying they will use some of the battery storage to accelerate from the final corner and start the lap as fast as possible.
The strategy may also be to reduce the recovery from full and part throttle, using the full battery at teh start of the lap to compensate.