Fred wrote: ↑10 Mar 2026, 01:38
https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/12433 ... r-mercedes
Seems like Mercedes deliberately held back information from customer teams on energy recovery. Stella isn’t particularly happy, and he along with Vowels were shocked by the energy recovery of the factory team. Plus side is that it seems like that’s the main source of the gap between us and Mercedes, but Stella still thinks it’ll take a bit to catch, especially if Toto keeps being Toto.
The discussion about engines is understandable at this stage. Everything is new—some understand more, others less—but over time, things will level out. We will eventually end up in the same position as in recent years, where the difference is made by innovations (front wing, suspension geometry, rear wing dynamics, sidepods, bargeboards, tire wear, etc.).
Many say McLaren shouldn't comment since they won two titles with a Mercedes engine. True, but in 2022, when the new regulations were introduced, the engines were already nearing maturity. In 2024 and 2025, when McLaren won their titles, it wasn't the engine that made the difference, but the aero package, the front suspension geometry in particular, and McLaren's ability to manage tire wear near its maximum capacity.
Now, it’s normal for Toto to try and keep as much of the Mercedes engine's potential under wraps as possible. Sure, McLaren, Williams, and Alpine pay tens of millions of euros for these engines, but Mercedes needs to build a sufficient lead in the first part of the season to ensure they maximize their title chances. Given the development rate of McLaren and Red Bull, this seems like the only real chance for Russell (and Mercedes) to win the titles in 2026.
McLaren has tried having their own engines before—we all remember the Honda era from 2015-2017—but they went through exactly what Aston Martin is experiencing now.
On the other hand, we have the example of Red Bull this year, who achieved what many thought impossible: having an 'in-house' engine almost as high-performing as Ferrari or Mercedes, teams with decades of experience in this field. So, if Zak wants something unique, as someone mentioned a few pages back, he could take over the engineers and facilities abandoned by Renault, reach deep into his pockets for other top engineers from rivals, and perhaps with the support of BMW or VW, create an engine exclusively for McLaren.