I'm confused the green bar jumps eclectically when shifting gears. Do you mean the blue bar? That's the one visible on your snapshots.Badger wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 16:05Not really, it's only ever increasing by a little less than half in the biggest harvesting zones, which would require about 5 seconds of continuous max harvest. Sounds unreasonable when you say it but if you actually look at the "harvest/deployment meter" above the gear number you can see how it happens. Using their various engine techniques they can essentially get the full 350 kW from the moment they brake until the moment they go back on throttle on the other end of the corner. In some corners that is easily 3-4-5 seconds when accounting for a bit of LiCo at the start.BorisTheBlade wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 15:34Exactly. In some braking zones it goes from rather empty to more or less full. That is impossible for 4 MJ in total.
See here. I've cut it from the moment he goes to full regen at 46.3s (you can see the green meter above the gear number is fully to the left), then at 51.2s the green meter starts going down. That's 5 seconds of continuous 350kW regen, or 1.75MJ. You can also see the SoC has gone from being at maybe 35-40% to about 80%.
https://i.postimg.cc/xT60NKk6/f1-lico.png
https://i.postimg.cc/KzhFhfVX/f1-lico-2.png
Maybe to keep it challenging.
The green bar that sits right above the gear number on the display. Not the gear shift lights.mzso wrote: ↑16 Feb 2026, 01:58I'm confused the green bar jumps eclectically when shifting gears. Do you mean the blue bar? That's the one visible on your snapshots.Badger wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 16:05Not really, it's only ever increasing by a little less than half in the biggest harvesting zones, which would require about 5 seconds of continuous max harvest. Sounds unreasonable when you say it but if you actually look at the "harvest/deployment meter" above the gear number you can see how it happens. Using their various engine techniques they can essentially get the full 350 kW from the moment they brake until the moment they go back on throttle on the other end of the corner. In some corners that is easily 3-4-5 seconds when accounting for a bit of LiCo at the start.BorisTheBlade wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 15:34
Exactly. In some braking zones it goes from rather empty to more or less full. That is impossible for 4 MJ in total.
See here. I've cut it from the moment he goes to full regen at 46.3s (you can see the green meter above the gear number is fully to the left), then at 51.2s the green meter starts going down. That's 5 seconds of continuous 350kW regen, or 1.75MJ. You can also see the SoC has gone from being at maybe 35-40% to about 80%.
https://i.postimg.cc/xT60NKk6/f1-lico.png
https://i.postimg.cc/KzhFhfVX/f1-lico-2.png
Maybe because cars would start using electrical engine? And switch over as they gain speed. This would look like Formula E and fans would hate it.
It would be interesting for the rules to allow those components to be removed to save weight (minimum weight correspondingly reduced if they are removed). Might the simpler cars be faster on some tracks?Tommi870 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2026, 16:17So how much slower would the cars actually be, if all components of the electric power train would simplye be removed? Even without any changes to the combustion engibe, the difference in laptime couldn't possibly be too big.
So what on earth is actually the purpose of these regulations?
-The net gain in laptime is minimal and would even be neglectable if the combustion engine/ fuel flow was a bit stronger.
- The cars are much less eco friendly as compared to a combustion engine only
- The energy recovery procedures have virtually zero correspondance to consumer cars.
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If you take out the electrical part these cars would be 4-5s slower per lap easily, they wouldn't make the 107% to qualify, you consider this "not too big"?Tommi870 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2026, 16:17So how much slower would the cars actually be, if all components of the electric power train would simplye be removed? Even without any changes to the combustion engibe, the difference in laptime couldn't possibly be too big.
So what on earth is actually the purpose of these regulations?
-The net gain in laptime is minimal and would even be neglectable if the combustion engine/ fuel flow was a bit stronger.
- The cars are much less eco friendly as compared to a combustion engine only
- The energy recovery procedures have virtually zero correspondance to consumer cars.
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if it is indeed 'flow' (volume/sec) based, does it mean :
1. I really would like to see the math behind that. The weight gain would easily be around 100 kilo grams. This would also allow you to run softer tires. That's an easy 4 seconds of laptime. So the electric part of the power unit needs to bring in nine seconds a lap to meet your prediction. A tall order to say the least.dialtone wrote: ↑16 Feb 2026, 19:04If you take out the electrical part these cars would be 4-5s slower per lap easily, they wouldn't make the 107% to qualify, you consider this "not too big"?Tommi870 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2026, 16:17So how much slower would the cars actually be, if all components of the electric power train would simplye be removed? Even without any changes to the combustion engibe, the difference in laptime couldn't possibly be too big.
So what on earth is actually the purpose of these regulations?
-The net gain in laptime is minimal and would even be neglectable if the combustion engine/ fuel flow was a bit stronger.
- The cars are much less eco friendly as compared to a combustion engine only
- The energy recovery procedures have virtually zero correspondance to consumer cars.
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1. laptime gain is not minimal at all, we're all here discussing how much slower it is that they need to LiCo to recharge, otherwise they would be going at 350kph in the straight in barcelona or bahrain where normally they go at 330 tops. The only reason why these cars are slower in some corners is the LiCo, not the engine technology per se.
2. That's obviously wrong so not much to say here. But I'll take the opportunity to bust this nonsense myth of "BuT tO mAkE bAtTeRiEs YoU uSe MoRe EnErGy AnD Co2", Lithium Ion batteries, aside from being just the current technology, are perfectly recyclable, the typical current recycling technology can recover over 80% of the original material, newer deployed technology brings this to 97-98% and research is getting closer to 100%, in practical terms you can reuse the lithium you mine once almost forever, even at the 80% recycle efficiency and a typical modern battery lasting 5000 cycles we're easily talking about 5+ decades of useful lithium life. Synthetic fuels and biofuels in the spec defined by FIA are net neutral carbon emissions, not much to say here either, it's literally in the rules that they have to be. Hybrid/PHEV/EV is the present including in super/hypercars like the technology marvel that is the F80, but aside from that, even the dumbest PHEV with 50km electric range would make most families in the world need only 3-4 gas tanks a year.
3. LMAO, LMFAO even.