I hope not. I'm a Ferrari fan but I would like to see a f1 season with at least 3 teams compete for the championships until the end. I know is impossible but never say never.
I hope not. I'm a Ferrari fan but I would like to see a f1 season with at least 3 teams compete for the championships until the end. I know is impossible but never say never.
It's more like 85 kg. It's been discussed in the 2026 engine thread.Seanspeed wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 16:42Whether it's 67kg or 75kg or whatever, it's not really relevant to what I'm saying. 70kg rough estimate is good enough to make the point. Nobody is otherwise going to still run like 90-100kg of fuel, not to mention the valuable extra space that takes up on top of the extra weight.motobaleno wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 16:29Actually we don't know the capacity of the fuel tanks and it could be different within teams. 70kg estimations comes from the reduction of fuel flow (from 100 to 70 kg/hr equivalent) but with new rules you have not a prescribed capacity and you could increase capacity to do more superclipping for instance.Seanspeed wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 16:19
Yes, the fuel tanks are just 70kg now. Which means that 50kg is literally like 3/4 of a full tank! That idea that Leclerc's running at the end of the test was done with the same kind of fuel load he'd have in the 2nd stint of a race is laughable.
Ferrari has either built one of the most dominant cars in F1 history or it's just a ridiculous, absurd claim from F1 press that loves to make stuff up in competition for attention.
That is just not true. Especially this year where there is not necessarily an overwhelming advantage in running full electric power early on in the acceleration phase. If straightline performance is even across the laps, that tells me ICE is running at similar capacity across the two laps and deployment differences account for peak acceleration differences.AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 17:48Higher acceleration peaks are correlated with higher performance runs whether that is due to less mass or more power. These peaks occur at T8 and T10 which is the logical. When the cars drive far below the peak in these corners, it means the lap is not going to be a higher performance run no matter what way the deployment is arranged. As I've shown, McL peak acceleration is lower on D3, and you also indicate that he uses the deployment in a different way. That's the point. The configuration of the McL on D3 is "lesser" than its configuration on D2. Mclaren have chosen to drive that way to limit their performance.nico5 wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 16:18
Don't mean to be rude, but this hardly proves anything. Because what matters is balance of overall deployment or performance across all straights, not peak acceleration like it might have been with V8s or even V6s when you knew they were on identical deployment maps.
For instance, comparing McLaren's laps from D2 vs D3, Piastri on D2 was faster on the straights but had massive clipping in T12 where he lost 3 tenths. In the end, "straightline" performance was similar across the two laps.


None of the principles from the previous generation have changed.
The image that you are showing is too noisy to draw any conclusions. What you're saying about Norris at T14 is a processing artifact. Look at the rest of his lines. I've used a moving average calculation to generate a smoothed and most importantly a physical acceleration response. Engines have a continuous power output. They don't jerk like that plot is showing.nico5 wrote: ↑04 Mar 2026, 11:55If straightline performance is even across the laps, that tells me ICE is running at similar capacity across the two laps and deployment differences account for peak acceleration differences.
You cannot look at this graphs and tell me we're comparing apples with apples.
And if you still wanna do that and look at the acceleration peaks, there's quite a few corners where Lando's lap is higher. For instance, one of his two peaks is T14-15, where he's a lot higher than Piastri. Once again, deployment maps.
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They actually have, quite drastically. In the previous regs it was a no brainer to run 120kW from K out of the corner and total energy management over one lap was so little of an issue that they would even offload the ICE through the wastegate and run the turbo on H only from battery energy for a few seconds.
In the previous regs, cars couldn't do two push laps in a row because they ran out of energy. It wasn't a fantasy world where they didn't have to care about the energy. It just wasn't as extreme as now.nico5 wrote: ↑04 Mar 2026, 14:32They actually have, quite drastically. In the previous regs it was a no brainer to run 120kW from K out of the corner and total energy management over one lap was so little of an issue that they would even offload the ICE through the wastegate and run the turbo on H only from battery energy for a few seconds.

Review the post carefully instead of making up things that were never said. viewtopic.php?p=1330828#p1330828nico5 wrote: ↑04 Mar 2026, 14:32The graph may be noisy, I agree, but you still not addressing the more relevant fact that those two laps do not differ in straightline performance overall despite, let me add, Norris' lap on D3 having a shallow Northernly wind, while Piastri had the opposite.
On top of that, your analysis makes it look like McLaren was running a more aggressive ICE map than Merc itself on most days, while that goes against what Stella himself claimed, that only the factory team was running race maps, and the clients weren't due to reliability concerns (Merc blew 2 ICEs).
they put Mercedes as the strongest team going into Melbourne, didn't they? They've actually been a bit pessimistic about Ferrari this offseason I thought
i wouldnt say pessimistic but they've been pretty consistent with putting Merc 1st and Ferrari 2ndjohnnycesup wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 04:46they put Mercedes as the strongest team going into Melbourne, didn't they? They've actually been a bit pessimistic about Ferrari this offseason I thought

They were very pessimistic before the Barcelona test because the rumours they got from their sources were of an underdeveloped/unreliable engine with mounted on a very rushed car (rushed to do the Fiorano launch and did not appear at the first Barcelona day).AR3-GP wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 05:00The way autoracer talks about the SF26, you would think it's for certain the fastest car. Odd that they only rank it 2nd.
I thought Leclerc did the most impressive race sims of anybody on the last Friday. However, we are told to fear Mercedes instead. Strange.
In my opinion, the italian media think Ferrari has the fastest car but are being superstitious about it.