Has anyone considered that this is all a smokescreen related to the hype surrounding the increase in ICE power and that, starting this year, ERS management is more important, which implies lower fuel consumption, so it is necessary to increase ICE efficiency? The implications are much greater if this efficiency increases. Firstly, if a car starts with less fuel, it will have: 1. faster lap times; 2. better tire management, especially rear tires, which are now under more stress because cars are coming out of corners much faster due to much stronger deployment compared to last year...Seanspeed wrote: ↑11 Feb 2026, 15:10They wouldn't all be making this fuss over a few HP, including Merc and their customers and others trying to get rid of the advantage.AR3-GP wrote: ↑11 Feb 2026, 15:04From the press conference in Bahrain (@KemalSengulll)
Wolff just spoke about the current engine discussions: "We have taken all the assurances that everything we do complies with the rules. What we're talking about isn't even a massive performance boost. That's the situation, but in my opinion, all our competitors got a bit offended and lobbied hard with the FIA for a long time."
"This lobbying activity has largely ramped up over the last few months. So secret meetings, secret letters written to the FIA—though in this sport, there's no such thing as secret... That's what brought things to this point."
"There's a governance process. If that governance votes for a change to the engine regulations, you have to accept it. It is what it is. This would be detrimental to all teams powered by Mercedes engines in such a scenario."
"The benefit this would bring us is just a few horsepower."
"We will always respect the sport's governance. If the sport's management makes a decision against or in favor of our position, we have to comply with both."

