I understand the argument that this is the "biggest rule change", the problem with that argument is that for me it falls apart when you look a little closer.Macklaren wrote: ↑23 Mar 2026, 09:30But this is the biggest rule change in history with arguably more time to be found in big chunks than at any other point this centurydia6olo wrote: ↑21 Mar 2026, 14:30I concur, I think many are forgetting that the 2022 to 2025 era of cars were extremely sensitive to setup & upgrades, it was that extreme sensitivity that made those type of gains possible.Emag wrote: ↑21 Mar 2026, 13:55I have a feeling people will be disappointed because they expect too much. What McLaren did mid 2023 and 2024 is not the norm at all. It's incredibly rare to get teams going from 6-7 tenths off to being 1-2 tenths ahead within the same season like that. If they do it again it will be very impressive, but I personally doubt they'll catch Mercedes this year.
I very much doubt that we will see those gains with these cars. We are much more likely to see more normal/equal gains across the board with these cars.
I feel any gains outside of the “norm” will only be made by the PU but even that I feel will be short lived because the PU’s will eventually also line up, probably as early as next year.
These cars are generally very basic, they don't need to be able to go around corners faster than their competition, heck I'd argue they don't even need to be all that good around corners.
These cars are all PU & they will all align in time.
That's not to say teams won't be able to find solid time with updates, I expect they will over the opening year or 2.
My counter argument is that because of the simplicity of these cars (other than the PU side of things), I don't see anyone gaining anything that pretty much all the others can't also gain.
