venkyhere wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 12:35
mwillems wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 11:36
I imagine that shorter gears won't help just by being shorter, but how they can be used for engine braking in corners.
Though the shorter gears suggest Mclaren has again not prioritised outright top speed. If the final gears were longer this would confirm a team believes it is low drag.
The MCL40 may be low drag, but the gearing doesn't lend weight to that idea.
ME4ME wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 11:53
Could you explain your reasoning?
with a shorter gears, they could aim for the battery pack to take up a larger share (than other teams) of the 'aero load' in the straights (ICE will be at higher rpms, but not burning as much fuel) and vice versa (battery pack taking lesser share w.r.t other teams, of the 'aero load' through medium/high speed corners). Battery discharge of power being a more efficient activity than ICE discharge of power, it can only mean that by using higher RPM on the ICE in the medium/high speed sections, they are using ICE power more effectively (more recharge at these speeds than others), and by having low drag in the straights, they are using battery power more effectively.
This goes against the traditional notion that if you choose shorter gears, your top speed will be limited. Because whatever be the gearing, the ratios are never chosen such that ICE rpm becomes a limitation anyway; it has always been the drag being the limitation. And I believe even in these regulation sets, no team will choose ICE rpm to be defining their limit at top gear. And we are not talking about big differences in the ratios across teams - that whole chart is ranging between 80% to 100%.
So you mean the ICE will bear the brunt of the work for exits and the MGU used more at post 180kph (ish)?
Is that an effective strategy rather than using full power earlier in the straight, or did I misunderstand?
I've just found an article about this from Scarbs, it has likely been posted elsewhere, but am posting here again.
https://motorsport.tech/formula-1/2026- ... s-in-focus
It doesn't sound very efficient as it seems you may be suggesting being part throttle on the straights for regen, but I don't think that is efficient. Are you able to explain a bit more as I may be misunderstanding. I guess these cars will be traction limited a bit more after corner exit and might not be power limited until what, 150+kph? That would be the same for most though, right? But that is under traditional F1 engines with 1000hp, so Power limitation would happen sooner?
I'm not sure how the teams can avoid some battery usage on corner exit without paying for it, though deployment will be graduated I guess?