It has been debunked that the engine can not run at room temp. Actual F1 engineers said it. But they warm it up beforehand to minimise friction at the start, where every engine has the most abrasion.dans79 wrote: ↑06 Feb 2026, 15:53
In thermal terms 0.5mm is a hell of a lot of thermal growth. As I said in my previous post, they would have to run heavier steel rods to get more growth compared to other teams. As I showed a few pages back, even if they used an exotic stainless steel with a high coefficient of expansion allow the rod has to be ~78°C hotter than the surrounding components to grow 0.1mm longer than their competition running titanium rods. To get to 0.5mm, the rod would have to be ~390°C hotter.
Let the magnitude of that number sink in.
Additionally you don't want the piston and the block expanding, you want them kept in a very specific temperature range. The blocks are aluminum, and the pistons are all steels. The rules mandate the pistons must be made from one of the following alloys, AMS 6487, 15cdv6, 42CrMo4, X38CrMoV5-3. Depending on the alloys you are comparing aluminum can expand at twice the rate of steel.
As you might know, the engines have to be warmed up to between 80°C and 90°C, before starting or else they will be instantaneously destroyed. The primary reason for this is because they are holding very very tight tolerances between the piston and the cylinder. They are so tight that at standard temperatures they are effectively seized together.
In other words, if you want your engines to last, you are going to limit their thermal expansion, and keep them in a tight temperature window.
So, of all the components that matter, the heads, rods, and cranks are the only ones you will see some benefit from. The heads expanding decreases the completion ratio, so you want to keep them as cool as possible to minimize expansion. The crank growing would increase displacement and effect the compression ratio. The rods growing would increase the compression ratio.
The problem is how do you get the rods and crank to run several hundred degrees Celsius hotter than in the past, without degrading the oil or causing some other kind of issue. You are talking about doubling or tripling the engine oils operating temperature compared to last year.
And I do not think you need 390 degrees hotter engine parts. I am quite sure they created some meta material, which can be built by 3D printing, that expand a lot more at regular engine temps, than solid materials.

