A few thoughts on the overtaking situation and its perception:
It is no secret that I find the new 2026 overtaking meta somewhat familiar and not worse than the pre-26 DRS gimmick:
hollus wrote: ↑15 Mar 2026, 17:40
…
But overtaking...
... to overtake you need a long straight then to be 5 or 6 tenths behind at corner exit, and then to have no large speed deficit at corner exit. If you fullfull a+b+c, then in the straight you press a button and from half of the straight, approximately, DRS makes sure that you have a large speed differential and the pass is done and dusted before the braking zone.
See what I did there?
Others seem to find it less acceptable…
langedweil wrote: ↑24 Mar 2026, 01:00
It was artificial, but nowhere near the current state of affairs. In fact, I'd argue it was partly simulating (and perhaps overdoing it a bit) the old slipstream idea, because you first had to come close (<1s) and then you had to close in more with overspeed so a pass could be made. Oftentimes the drs zone was too long resulting in (too) easy passes. Then again, if cars would be rougly the same, the passed one could get drs in the next zone.
venkyhere wrote: ↑24 Mar 2026, 07:05
No. In previous regs, it required a certain amount of skill to follow in the dirty air to be within the 1s window, to use DRS on the straight. It required a certain amount of skill to 'deny' the 1s window to stay in the lead, even if the chasing car gets closer in the slipstream in the straight.
With current regs, only 'overtake mode' requires the above skillset to use/deny the advantage in the straight. However, superior/inferior charging/discharging via better S/W or illegal ICE , doesn't require 'driver skill' in the rest of the track until reaching the straight. There is even 'boost mode' that's a 'DRS whenever I want' in any part of the track.
They are chalk and cheese.
… but I’d argue that the characteristics of those acceptable DRS passes lead to a successful pass, with no yo-yo re-pass, also in 2026.
A thought on what might be driving such optics:
In 2025 with DRS, the following car would get a temporary increase in performance, sometimes used to stay close or to chase, but mostly to overtake.
In 2026, the defending car often sees its performance decrease and then a pass happens.
God, put like that 2026 sounds like a puking bad idea!
Now let’s re-word that.
In 2025, the cars were kept on a handicapped stated, with less performance than they were capable of, for 99% of the race. Crucially not for Q. And then, in arbitrary circumstances, in selected parts of the track, the chasing car was allowed to unleash its real potential by using DRS. For that straight, the passing car was in Q mode, while the passed car was in race mode.
Press a button, easy blow by pass, no defence possible.
In 2026, most cars are running at 100% of their capability for most of the race, often with higher performance than even in Q. Then, in selected parts of the track, but pretty much at any moment, the chased car might find itself past its energy or deployment limit, and suffer degraded performance. The passing car is hopefully still running at its maximum performance level, what it was designed to do most of the race, and hence pressing the usual button longer than usual finds itself with an easy blow-by pass, almost impossible to defend.
Hmmm, in 2025 we had a constant arbitrary limit, a handicap, really, removed to pass. The leading car has no say on the maneuver.
In 2026 we have cars both running at the max performance of their design, the speed differential (except those 0.5 MJ) was under the influence of both cars and the leading driver has a say on the maneuver (by keeping enough energy to defend).
In 2025 the passed car was left helpless and crying.
In 2026 the passed car has a good chance of fighting back.
It is a bit a matter of choice of point of view, no?
But DRS was really an arbitrary performance handicap released only at selected arbitrary times. To read it as an increase in performance is a choice. It looks like that, but think about it, how come that the increase in performance was within the car’s capabilities in the first place???