Tommi870 wrote: ↑16 Feb 2026, 19:58
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.
Alright so... MGU-K is 16kg, MGU-K transmission is 4kg (although depends on where MGU-K is placed) and ES is 35kg, so this is 55kg, not 100kg. Of course you'd need to start the race with 30-40kg more fuel (last year cars were using 25-30% more fuel and they still had electric motors and battery, so make it even worse than that), at least, to make up for the lack of electrical power, so you may be light at the end of the race, but you are a hog at the start.
Anyway I think it's more complicated than that. The turbo lag you incur without MGU-H, and the then lack of MGU-K, makes it so that you are accelerating much slower out any traction zone which is where most of the time is spent, in slow corners followed by long straights you'd find yourself probably being an open DRS slower the straight, on basically all straights. Considering the typical DRS gains you 1.5-2s per lap, and that you'd have this advantage on every single traction zone and straight and not just 2-3 DRS zones, IMHO this is where you end up 4s slower.
We don't have much telemetry of cars before MGU-K/MGU-H or KERS and comparison between this year's cars with last year's is difficult because of the narrower tires and decreased downforce, but even in Bahrain test, where likely nobody has yet pushed hard at all, you can see that the cars have better acceleration on the main straight and out of T1, T10 or T13, and of course, T14 compared to 2022, despite being clearly energy starved.
Grosjean said he hit 355 in spain... You need real acceleration to get there and only electric power gives you that.
2. Sorry, but an engine with fuel restriction+ the electrical components can never be more eco friendly than that same stand alone engine. That really needs no further explanation.
Hollus said no politics, I don't understand why this would be politics, and I'll try to give you the benefit of the doubt, but after you quote 100kg for battery earlier, it's really hard for me to find a reasonable way to understand how you determine that. These cars are using 25%+ less fuel than the previous generation... What numbers are you looking at?