I know it's largely meaningless at this stage, highly depends on how much the driver is pushing, PU mode, fuel levels, and so on, but a comparison of the lap times set on 3rd day between the top 5 drivers, the tires used, and their wear can be found in the photo below:
All the teams had this issue except the Mercedes-powered teams, and the issue is an electrical power deployment rather than an ICE one. So all other teams are working flat out on the MGU-K deployment mappings, facing the following dilemma: how to set up a deployment map that wears less on the rear tyre but also doesn't cost you much time lap? Worth mentioning that Pirelli is a little worried after Barcelona regarding the rear tyres wearing out too much, caused by the powerful electric deployment out of the corner, which is much needed in order to set a quick lap time ...

The engine learning systems has been around since the Hybrid engines. Honda was very open and transparent tuning their MGUK deplyment and charging at different tracks. The ECU can do this with its onboard "navigation" it knows where the car is on track. This is why Lewis highlights that the car's deployment autotune (for lack of a better term) gets messed up when he careens off track.sucof wrote: ↑13 Feb 2026, 11:39I meant systems that are not on the car. I know in car these are forbidden.AR3-GP wrote: ↑13 Feb 2026, 11:30There's a fine line in the regulations if I'm not mistaken. Renault was disqualified from the 2019 Japanese GP for using a distance-based system to automatically adjust the brake bias. It was deemed a "driver-aid" but what is not a driver aid? Power steering is a driver aid.![]()
But you can still collect data, and then pre program everything based on that, also teach the driver how to drive the fastest laps.
You can use off track supercomputers, LLMs, to do this, they will provide you with all the optimal settings and methods for every meter of the track.
He does miss one big factor (for me). For the same amount of regen, superclipping is a lot faster than lift and coastatanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 16:32Now, regarding the driving techniques, the deployment maps, etc., that are needed in the 2026 regs (don't know if this thread is the right place to do that), the hot topic these days is about what the drivers would need to do regarding the best way to manage the energy through a lap. In the following video, the driver and mental coaching mentor Martin is evaluating the pros and cons of the main driver techniques regarding energy management for 2026 (from the 13:01 minute mark):
https://postimages.org/
With superclipping these cars come down from 1000 to 300-400 hpjohnnycesup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 05:51He does miss one big factor (for me). For the same amount of regen, superclipping is a lot faster than lift and coastatanatizante wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 16:32Now, regarding the driving techniques, the deployment maps, etc., that are needed in the 2026 regs (don't know if this thread is the right place to do that), the hot topic these days is about what the drivers would need to do regarding the best way to manage the energy through a lap. In the following video, the driver and mental coaching mentor Martin is evaluating the pros and cons of the main driver techniques regarding energy management for 2026 (from the 13:01 minute mark):
https://postimages.org/
We have no idea how the 2022 concept would’ve evolved because it got destroyed by technical directives and rule changes.
Still better than 0 hp of LiCo.ryaan2904 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 08:59With superclipping these cars come down from 1000 to 300-400 hpjohnnycesup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 05:51
He does miss one big factor (for me). For the same amount of regen, superclipping is a lot faster than lift and coast![]()
When he's talking about Lift and Coast he means lift and regen, so it's more like -350kW = -470hp, not zero.Paa wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 16:33Still better than 0 hp of LiCo.ryaan2904 wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 08:59With superclipping these cars come down from 1000 to 300-400 hpjohnnycesup wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 05:51
He does miss one big factor (for me). For the same amount of regen, superclipping is a lot faster than lift and coast![]()
That's a bad line of reasoning. If you base a concept off something that can be outdone by a TD it's a bad concept. Car was bouncing, red flag with suspension design. Flexi floor saga was also a red flag. It was a bad concept that died rightly early. That said it should have been allowed to have lasted at least one full year. In that regard Toto got Ferrari nailed.
That’s what I say about the blown diffuser as well, or using brake cooling ducts to heat up tires or flexible wings. If your concept can’t win races without an engine then it’s no good concept.f1isgood wrote: ↑15 Feb 2026, 17:45That's a bad line of reasoning. If you base a concept off something that can be outdone by a TD it's a bad concept. Car was bouncing, red flag with suspension design. Flexi floor saga was also a red flag. It was a bad concept that died rightly early. That said it should have been allowed to have lasted at least one full year. In that regard Toto got Ferrari nailed.