Yes, I am in agreement with that (bold highlighted). Statements from Honda and the delay for Barcelona, all point to the fact that the team is 'delayed w.r.t others'. Hence the 'as much as possible' in my post. All teams are doing the best they can, I don't think anybody is trying to 'hide their capability' or 'play poker' with the competition (unlike what happens in the mid-years or end-years of a regulation set) - because 'proper data' is too important at this stage.Leon Kennedy wrote: ↑02 Feb 2026, 17:37The Bahrain tests will be fundamental, I don't know if anyone has already used more aggressive engine modes and that will be a very important part. Remember Ferrari in 2022? They did some brilliant tests, with many laps, but then as soon as they pushed the engine to Catalunya and Baku, they had problems. We also need to see how Honda's development is progressing, because the one presented was not the final version.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 Feb 2026, 15:44There is so much talk of 'not running full potential' , 'conservative engine mode' , 'fake aero bits' etc in all team threads. The fact of the matter is, teams try to do 'as much as possible' by bringing 'as many parts as possible' for shakedown/testing events in such a 'fully revamped formula'. They want to know not just about what they have, but mostly to form a crude idea about what 'development path' to take over the next few seasons, when they sweep through different PU modes, different cooling settings, different tyre pressures, different ride heights etc etc. Hence every hour of the 9 days of 'test time' is super important. The focus has to be more (more than ever before) on themselves than 'fooling others'.
Turn up the engine to 11, run with low(high) fuel load to sim quali(race), test the limits of the car and still produce a 'sandbagged laptime' so as to not show their hand fully (if you have been watching the FP2/FP3 sessions by Mclaren & Verstappen over the past 2 years (most recent example), you will know how they do it).
Drivers can easily hide laptime by pushing in selective mini-sectors and ease off in other mini-sectors , and then do the inverse in the next lap, and show 'consistent laptime'. At this early stage of development, it will be seen as the car having to suffer from 'tradeoff' between corner entry and exits. So sandbagging can be done by the driver, it doesn't need the car to be compromised from whatever is the 'target performance after risk evaluation' that the team wants.
Piastri (first half), Russel & Max did it so well last season, even all the way until end of Q1 - not revealing their trump cards driving wise, and build a perception of 'car limitation'.
