Stu wrote: ↑21 Apr 2026, 11:10
A more sensible version would be the flip side of that, unless the important acceleration zones are limited to areas of the track where the aero is trimmed out.
I assume it means 350kW MGU-H for only the main (long) straights, so that would be designated as the one or two long straights on a circuit. E.g., for China that would be the back straight and pit straight only.
So for short straights only 250 kW MGU-H will be available.
Stu wrote: ↑21 Apr 2026, 20:15
I remember it being said that it was so easy a monkey could drive them back in 1992/3 with active suspension, traction control and ABS, but somehow the cream still rose to the top.
I guess!
It's pretty amazing that McLaren-Honda MP4/6-RA121/E won the 1991 season with (I believe) none of that stuff. I guess primarily because all that "stuff" on the Williams was quite unreliable compared to the simple McLaren, even with the McLaren having the heavy and thirsty V12 Honda engine.
I still don't think Red Bull Ford, Cadillac or Ferrari would quit if the FIA announced ~650kW (fuel flow limited) 3.2L V12s for 2028 with a 100kW KERS system... [As to Audi, Mercedes and Honda, that cannot be guaranteed though.]
IIRC, Cadillac don't plan to have their power unit until 2028 anyway, so announcing the change to V12 now would give them the same chance to build one as everyone else.
But is the current style of car
far preferred by Mr. Wolff and Mercedes Grand Prix, even if the changes
still mean it is better to not go 100% in corners to have more power on straights, and therefore the cars
still conflict with the preference of Mr. Verstappen, Mr. Leclerc or Mr. Sainz?
peewon wrote: ↑21 Apr 2026, 05:19
I think
the drop in lap times might have reached embarrassing thresholds then. I heard somewhere around 2 second slower to get down to 6.0MJ.
I could not care less! TBH, I don't think the drivers could care less either.
If the F1 drivers cared about going fast in a straight line, would they not have taken up drag racing?
Do people
really care more about the laptime, than having cars go as fast as possible in corners and not slow down dramatically from 2/3rd of the way down a straight‽
Surely the behaviour of the car around the circuit (trackside, off-board and on-board cameras) is FAR more visible to fans than a lap time number‽
Is not deliberately going slower in corners to harvest more to go faster on the straights and therefore faster overall, the entire crux of the problem with the regulations --
not the strength of the regulations?
Piastri pushed harder on his final qualifying lap in Australia, all his corner speeds were up, but therefore he harvested less (since less speed delta to minimum speed), deployed less and thus lost more time on straights than he gained in corners and therefore he was slower! Surely that is absurd?