On the topic of compression ratios for the 2026 formula.Badger wrote: ↑22 Jan 2026, 12:45In other words he didn't say what you attributed to him. But he very clearly said that they could do higher compression, and that the 16:1 CR was "too low".Bill wrote: ↑22 Jan 2026, 12:40Maybe problems is not the right word but technically challenges are the are his real words "They are more complex, because they are composed of elements with different evaporation points.”Badger wrote: ↑22 Jan 2026, 12:29Where did he say that? Give us the quote and source.
It doesn't make sense to "thump your chest" about something when you are actually struggling with it. He's a real paddock source saying the exact opposite of what you are sayingThat doesn't eliminate the possibility that someone is struggling with their fuel, but not everyone.
“With sustainable fuels, some components evaporate later than others, and this makes combustion more complex. We are working with hotter combustion chambers, a condition that opens up.
The measured value at room temperature of 16:1 or just under that value, for legality. The Historic limit of 18:1 at any time. If I read this correctly, there's not really a hot running limit at all in 2026. You could engineer for 20:1 or more in a hot running config if you wanted to.
People keep talking about this as if the manufacturers have achieved the hot running/room temperature differences using only the bottom end (crank/rods/pistons) - presumably some form of elastic behaviour based on temperature. I think it'd make a lot of sense for it to also be in the injector, where you could (for example) control temperature of materials at will more easily.
A system to up the compression ratio by (for example) disabling a cooling loop that causes a material to expand and lower the volume in the injectors would be pretty straightforward to implement and relatively easy to tune.
With 70kg per race and 3000MJ/h flow, 2026 is a fuel efficiency formula for the ICE. Nobody's measuring the horrific NOx emissions practically guaranteed from high compression ratios, so the development direction is pretty clear in that regard.
If nothing else, ignore the discussed 18:1 limit. It was in the previous formula and doesn't exist any more. The sky is the limit now.
