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.
Hoffman900
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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dbl post
Last edited by Hoffman900 on 26 Jan 2026, 04:47, edited 1 time in total.

Hoffman900
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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As I posted in the other thread;

V8 drag race and circle track builders set P-H around .040in (1mm) with steel rods which in practice is near zero Piston to Head clearance at redline (the goal is to run around 0.1mm running clearance). This isn’t out of the realm at all.

For a typical racing US domestic V8 with a 4.25in bore, 64cc chambers, and a 10cc dome, that’s a change from to 12:1 to 13.9:1.

This has been a “thing” for decades in race engine building. No fancy degrees or materials needed and certaintly not an industry secret.

All engines are limited by piston to head clearance. You can’t modify this, at some point, they meet, and it’s expensive. Now depending on the rods being used, it may matter. For example, on an American V8 drag race engine, aluminum rods may require 1.50mm p-h clearance ambient vs the 1mm for steel rods. Both will end up around .1mm near redline if you’re doing it right. Both will measure slightly different geometric compression ratios (aluminum being lower) but the same running compression ratio.

Binotto as an engine guy should know this. People building engines in their garages who struggled through high school even know this. This sounds more like sour grapes than anything.

dialtone
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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I have no clue why forums always think they are the smartest.

Binotto has more experience building racing engines in his pinky than people here have in their life. He obviously knows all of this, he built the Ferrari 2019 engine and plenty other ones.

The issue is the rule was written in absolutes, then it was changed in October 2025.

The problem is not Binotto not knowing but the rule being written badly and some teams being rewarded for taking a risk, while others got shafted for doing so. To make it worse Binotto was punished not long ago for taking risks on the engine rules.

Any comment trying to go for “how could they not know?” Just highlights the commenter arrogance. Simplistic comments like “everyone knows” are extremely insulting to the sport.

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FW17
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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wuzak wrote:
25 Jan 2026, 06:31

But it also includes part throttle and full throttle recovery.
How does driver do part throttle recovery?

Will the driver apply full throttle and use the brake peddle to control the torque to wheels by the amount of generation from MGUH?
Or do you mean a throttle map which sends only part of the power to the wheels?

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BorisTheBlade
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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FW17 wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 06:30
wuzak wrote:
25 Jan 2026, 06:31

But it also includes part throttle and full throttle recovery.
How does driver do part throttle recovery?

Will the driver apply full throttle and use the brake peddle to control the torque to wheels by the amount of generation from MGUH?
Or do you mean a throttle map which sends only part of the power to the wheels?
The latter one. While the rules restrict the degree of freedom, as a rule of thumb you can harvest around 100 KW while the driver torque demand is below what the ICE is able to deliver.

wuzak
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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It will be part of an ECU map.

Tommy Cookers
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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dialtone wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 05:29
I have no clue why forums always think they are the smartest.

The problem is .... the rule being written badly .....

Any comment trying to go for “how could they not know?” Just highlights the commenter arrogance. Simplistic comments like “everyone knows” are extremely insulting to the sport.
all the cars are illegal and have been illegal all the time since 1.1.2014
(and many have been illegal since 1914 when 'capacity' was first limited)

since 2014 the maximum ICE swept volume is 1600 cc - and the MINIMUM ICE swept volume is 1590 cc

a 1599 cc car (measured by FIA rules) has well over 1600 cc swept volume at race rpm
(even a 1590 cc car is over 1600 cc at race rpm)
because the upward semi-stroke and the downward semi-stroke are increased at TDC and BDC by inertial etc forces
by about 3000 ppm of the con-rod loa (plus the deflections of the crank throws etc)
ie more than 9 parts per thousand of the semi-stroke (and so by more than 9 cc per litre)

further ....
the swept volume limits are & have since 1914 been further breached by the thermal expansion of pistons & cylinders


.... UNLESS THE RULES ARE UNDERSTOOD NOW THE SAME WAY THEY HAVE BEEN UNDERSTOOD SINCE 1914
Last edited by Tommy Cookers on 26 Jan 2026, 14:40, edited 6 times in total.

Hoffman900
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 14:20
dialtone wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 05:29
I have no clue why forums always think they are the smartest.

The problem is .... the rule being written badly .....

Any comment trying to go for “how could they not know?” Just highlights the commenter arrogance. Simplistic comments like “everyone knows” are extremely insulting to the sport.
all the cars are illegal and have been illegal all the time since 1.1.2014
(and many have been illegal since 1914 when 'capacity' was first limited)

since 2014 the maximum ICE swept volume is 1600 cc - and the minimum ICE swept volume ic 1590 cc

a 1599 cc car (measured by FIA rules) has well over 1600 cc swept volume at race rpm
(even a 1590 cc car is over 1600 cc at race rpm)
because the upward semi-stroke and the downward semi-stroke are increased at TDC and BDC by inertial etc forces
by about 3000 ppm of the con-rod loa
ie about 9 parts per thousand of the semi-stroke (and so by 9 cc per litre)

further ....
the swept volume limits are & have since 1914 also been breached by the thermal expansion of pistons & cylinders


UNLESS THE RULES ARE THE WAY THEY HAVE BEEN UNDERSTOOD NOT THE WAY SOME NOW IMAGINE THEY ARE
This. Binotto isn’t dumb, but this just reeks of sour grapes to me. This is also on the FIA… when you regulate everything to the nth degree and have overly complicated rules, you open the door to this. For as much as the rules spell out, they just about might as well be spec engines.

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Juzh
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
24 Jan 2026, 21:21
BorisTheBlade wrote:
24 Jan 2026, 20:39
.. there is a limit of energy usage per hour. For a typical race that translates to around 70 kg of fuel and that is what Scarbs meant.
it doesn't translate to around 70 kg per race
it translates to around 100 kg per race
the limit to what could be used

the heat rate per hour has been cut by 30% but the kg per heat rate has been raised eg by 15%
Please elaborate. Thanks.

Tommy Cookers
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Juzh wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 14:59
Tommy Cookers wrote:
24 Jan 2026, 21:21
BorisTheBlade wrote:
24 Jan 2026, 20:39
.. there is a limit of energy usage per hour. For a typical race that translates to around 70 kg of fuel and that is what Scarbs meant.
it doesn't translate to around 70 kg per race
it translates to around 100 kg per race
the limit to what could be used

the heat rate per hour has been cut by 30% but the kg per heat rate has been raised eg by 15%
Please elaborate. Thanks.
from 2026
regardless of fuel manufacturer the fueling energy/heat rate must not exceed 3000 KJ/hr
(about 30% less than energy rate under the old 100 kg/hr rate rules and typical old fuel energy content of 44KJ/kg)

the new fuel can be anything between 38 KJ/kg and 41 KJ/kg
ie the fuel massflow rate for a competitor will depend on the KJ/kg of the fuel type used by that competitor

and eg with 38 KJ/kg fuel the massflow rate (and so the mass loaded) will be higher than eg with the 41 KJ/kg fuel
so eg a '38' fuel load to be 15% more mass than we might expect from familiarity with the old fuel

so I have suggested that some eg the '38' fuel usere might load about 95 kg
the '38' fuel rules give scope eg for a significant alcohol content - but alcohols are low energy per kg

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Juzh
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 15:35
regardless of fuel manufacturer the fueling energy/heat rate must not exceed 3000 KJ/hr
3000 MJ/h, right?

Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 15:35
the new fuel can be anything between 38 KJ/kg and 41 KJ/kg
Would it not be preferable to have as high energy density as possible (so 41 MJ/kg) to reduce weight?

Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 15:35
so eg a '38' fuel load to be 15% more mass than we might expect from familiarity with the old fuel
I still dont understand where this extra 15% comes from or why is it needed when fuel density and energy flow are limited :-k

mzso
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Juzh wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 16:43
Would it not be preferable to have as high energy density as possible (so 41 MJ/kg) to reduce weight?

I still dont understand where this extra 15% comes from or why is it needed when fuel density and energy flow are limited :-k
If you have lower energy density fuel, you need more of it, don't you? So more mass flow.

But I don't think anyone would go near the lower end, it would be a catastrophic handicap.

wuzak
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Juzh wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 16:43
Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 15:35
so eg a '38' fuel load to be 15% more mass than we might expect from familiarity with the old fuel
I still dont understand where this extra 15% comes from or why is it needed when fuel density and energy flow are limited :-k
I think he is saying that the mass of the lowest energy density 2026 fuel (38MJ/kg) is about 15% greater than for a 2025 fuel with the same total energy content.

44/38 = 1.157.

Tommy Cookers
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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yes

and eg
(per kg of air used) alcohols give more heat when burned (than does 2025 'E10 gasoline' type fuel) but ....
(per kg of air used) many more grams of (alcohol) fuel are needed (than if E10 was the fuel)

ie alcohols inherently give more power and energy from a given ICE ....
eg 100% methanol is about 10% more powerful than E10 (in a given ICE) but .....
as methanol LHV is maybe 20 MJ/kg and ethanol LHV is maybe 28 MJ/kg ....

a 38 MJ/kg fuel blend cannot contain much methanol (there's anyway a limit of 4% methanol) ... or ethanol
but could give slightly more power and energy than E10 (at the cost of more fuel weight)

gruntguru
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Re: 2025/2026 Hybrid Powerunit speculation

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
26 Jan 2026, 18:39
. . . .
ie alcohols inherently give more power and energy from a given ICE ....
eg 100% methanol is about 10% more powerful than E10 (in a given ICE) but .....
as methanol LHV is maybe 20 MJ/kg and ethanol LHV is maybe 28 MJ/kg ....

a 38 MJ/kg fuel blend cannot contain much methanol (there's anyway a limit of 4% methanol) ... or ethanol
but could give slightly more power and energy than E10 (at the cost of more fuel weight)
Alcohols won't be capable of "more energy" in the sense of heat energy released during combustion - energy flow is limited and based on LHV of the fuel.

I assume you meant more energy at the crank due to the higher TE.

(Just clarifying for the sake of others here.)
je suis charlie