Off topic, but still on topic.
A brilliant summary of the 2026 regulations from Lollipopman : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcrblPqT6sM
Comic relief of the kind that suits this forum to a T.
Lol. These guys do the best f1 journalism around atm.venkyhere wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 21:00Off topic, but still on topic.
A brilliant summary of the 2026 regulations from Lollipopman : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcrblPqT6sM
Comic relief of the kind that suits this forum to a T.
Those would be good band-aid fixes IMO.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 12:30If this race is as terrible a it looks like it will be based on quali, I say we're getting panicked regulation change discussions by the end of this triple header. Those will undeniably result in deployment limitations in the short term, more fuel by next year.
The thing that they may have forgotten (as engineers) is that fans and drivers don't care about the laptime in itself, they care about the sensation of pushing and cars looking fast in corners. If fans and drivers wanted timing scores dominated by straight-line performance, then they would be drag racing enthusiasts!FittingMechanics wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 09:51Reason they are allowing these things is because over the course of the lap, it is faster to allow some recharging via clipping and coasting because the gains from use of energy at corner exit are that much larger.
Surely only cornering performance makes a difference to spectacle? Straight line performance, arguably, makes very little difference to spectacle. The decision to design the regulations based on overall laptimes and not cornering speed seems to have been misguided.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 16:05The solution to the problems with this regulation set without making the cars horribly slow is one of:
Excellent ideas!gearboxtrouble wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 19:25Even a minor ~5% fuel flow increase would need some changes to be made to ancillaries, engine management and the fuel system itself. Thats not feasible mid season. Best option for 26 would be to limit peak deployment to a range between 200 and 350 KW depending on the circuit to minimize superclipping and lico. For 27 they could go to a 70-30 split with a ~750 hp ICE and a ~300 hp MGU-K which should be doable by increasing the fuel flow and energy density cap.
Well yes, cornering performance is clearly more important, but obviously we as fans would prefer it if the cars were faster than F2. The other easy alternative to stop cars from super clipping through corners and lifting and coasting is to ban both.JordanMugen wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 16:23Surely only cornering performance makes a difference to spectacle? Straight line performance, arguably, makes very little difference to spectacle. The decision to design the regulations based on overall laptimes and not cornering speed seems to have been misguided.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 16:05The solution to the problems with this regulation set without making the cars horribly slow is one of:
The 2026 seem slow in corners (it's nice they slide and can be pushed), that they are getting laptime back on the straights doesn't make them seem faster. It is only seen on the stopwatch. So they could be reduced to 700hp racing cars (550hp ICE + 150hp ERS) without looking visibly slower on track (only being slower in terms of laptime) and then behave more like a "normal" ICE racing car.
Like that ever happened, or will ever happen.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 12:30If this race is as terrible a it looks like it will be based on quali, I say we're getting panicked regulation change discussions by the end of this triple header. Those will undeniably result in deployment limitations in the short term, more fuel by next year.
Cars racing each other is the majority of spectacle. Most can't see, nor care about the difference of straight line speed or cornering speeds (unless it gets extremely slower). These are distant factors behind on-track action.JordanMugen wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 16:23Surely only cornering performance makes a difference to spectacle? Straight line performance, arguably, makes very little difference to spectacle. The decision to design the regulations based on overall laptimes and not cornering speed seems to have been misguided.
If racing was the spectacle, F1 wouldn’t even be in the top two dozen of motorsports people watched.mzso wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 21:03Like that ever happened, or will ever happen.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 12:30If this race is as terrible a it looks like it will be based on quali, I say we're getting panicked regulation change discussions by the end of this triple header. Those will undeniably result in deployment limitations in the short term, more fuel by next year.
Cars racing each other is the majority of spectacle. Most can't see, nor care about the difference of straight line speed or cornering speeds (unless it gets extremely slower). These are distant factors behind on-track action.JordanMugen wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 16:23Surely only cornering performance makes a difference to spectacle? Straight line performance, arguably, makes very little difference to spectacle. The decision to design the regulations based on overall laptimes and not cornering speed seems to have been misguided.
F1 mainly relies on, big money, big history and big PR to stay successful.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 21:09If racing was the spectacle, F1 wouldn’t even be in the top two dozen of motorsports people watched.mzso wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 21:03Like that ever happened, or will ever happen.bananapeel23 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 12:30If this race is as terrible a it looks like it will be based on quali, I say we're getting panicked regulation change discussions by the end of this triple header. Those will undeniably result in deployment limitations in the short term, more fuel by next year.
Cars racing each other is the majority of spectacle. Most can't see, nor care about the difference of straight line speed or cornering speeds (unless it gets extremely slower). These are distant factors behind on-track action.JordanMugen wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 16:23Surely only cornering performance makes a difference to spectacle? Straight line performance, arguably, makes very little difference to spectacle. The decision to design the regulations based on overall laptimes and not cornering speed seems to have been misguided.
That said, F1 has relied on “we don’t gave good racing, but look how fast the cars are going!” for most of its life. Now it has neither.
So mostly from the era just before the introduction of DRS that sucked so much they had to come up with an overtaking aid.vormelifriik wrote: ↑07 Mar 2026, 21:15Ahead of the weekend I enjoyed some of the highlights from 2008, 2004, 2009, 2011 era from F1 youtube channel and it just made me a little sad inside to see what the sport has become today, so so so very far from flat out racing it used to be.