mkay wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 18:04
I think Ferrari may have made a mistake going for a small turbo. It's absolutely going to haunt them at tracks like Suzuka, Spa, Silverstone, Monza, Baku, Jeddah, Qatar, Vegas.
They ran a smaller turbo during the previous formula and it didn't seem to hurt them too much at power sensitive tracks with long straights, like the ones you mention.
Let them optimize the energy recovery software/deployment strategies, bring the updated rear-wing, and we'll go from there. If they're still short on power, then perhaps it was a poor design choice. But I think it's too early to conclude that.
And even if a smaller turbo compromises some performance at tracks like the ones you mentioned, it remains to be seen how it will perform at tracks with very different layouts to Australia, during starts/restarts, how active aero may be able to help compensate for these potential compromises, and what other benefits it may bring.
We know Australia is an outlier of a track (especially with these engine regulations) and apparently Ferrari were far from optimized in their energy recovery/deployment during Q3. The fact the Mercedes' customer teams were also 1s+ away seems to be reason for some optimism. It is a long season and lots for the teams to still learn.
Even if Mercedes does have a considerable power advantage, ADUO exists and the June 1 change in compression ratio compliance checks will happen (whether or not that will actually affect performance, I guess we'll see).