matt_s wrote: ↑20 Feb 2026, 21:55
McL-H wrote: ↑20 Feb 2026, 20:43
To me this is not F1 anymore. These regulations are extremely dull. Look how slow they are through the corners. Why why do they keep messing up this racing series so bad? All it needed was last year regulations with proper screaming V10 engine, bio fuel if they please. No no. Lada cornering is what we get.
Obviously we haven't seen them actually race yet, but a number of the traits of these cars look like they could promote good racing.
Yes, the teams will need some time to learn and optimise PU usage, and maybe they will tweak the regs on harvesting.
Yes, there is a danger that one team is ahead of the pack in this reg cycle.
However, "slow" through the corners is not all bad IMHO. They are slower because the cars have a lot less downforce. Drivers should no longer be able to just step on it and hold on through corners like Eau Rouge. They will be more on the edge, hopefully resulting in driver skill being a greater differentiator.
2025 cars were about 10 seconds faster than they were in the early 90's on many comparable tracks, were the cars rubbish to watch back then?
Also, due to lower DF, higher straight line speed, and lower mechanical grip from smaller contact patch, braking distances are longer. With longer braking zones, there is more scope for drivers to make moves under braking.
These regs weren't designed to promote good racing. They exist for one reason, to make the power unit work. The 2022 chassis regs were only 4 years old. The chassis and aero wasn't supposed to change.
They sacrificed everything they learned about following with the 2022 car , to make the new engine regs work.
The whole concept of a DRS train didn't even exist until 2022. Only after 2022 could the cars could follow behind each other. It is funny how ppl started to think this was normal , as if a pack of cars from 2005 to 2021 could follow each other front wing to gearbox for laps on end. That era is over and we won't be seeing cars follow like that unless or until ground effect comes back.