langedweil wrote: ↑18 Mar 2026, 04:43
stephen wrote: ↑17 Mar 2026, 22:33
These new regulations are leading to much closer and more exciting racing than in the ground effect era.
Au contraire; there was some intra-team yoyo passing, combined with energy starved cars that took corners on a 75% power output.
The end result at least wasn't "much closer" either compared to last year.
China 2026:
1. K. Antonelli – 1:33:15.607
2. G. Russell – +5.515s
3. L. Hamilton – +25.267s
4. C. Leclerc – +28.894s
5. O. Bearman – +57.268s
6. P. Gasly – +59.647s
7. L. Lawson – +80.588s
8. I. Hadjar – +87.247s
9. C. Sainz – +1 lap
10. F. Colapinto – +1 lap
China 2025:
1. O. Piastri – 1:30:55.026
2. L. Norris – +9.748s
3. G. Russell – +11.097s
4. M. Verstappen – +16.656s
5. E. Ocon – +49.969s
6. K. Antonelli – +53.748s
7. A. Albon – +56.321s
8. O. Bearman – +61.303s
9. L. Stroll – +70.204s
10. C. Sainz – +76.387
The relevant point of comparison should be Shanghai 2014, or generously Shanghai 2017 (since 2022 was cancelled).
Gaps will ALWAYS be exaggerated early on in a regulation cycle. I'd argue the field spread is actually surprisingly small given that they implemented new, hard to utilize engines and an entirely new aero package all at once.
Also frankly I don't get the hate towards overtake mode. It's no more powerful than DRS was, but it creates the ability to overtake in more places and in more ways. It was the one part of the regulations pretty much everyone liked when it was first presented, and it feels like people are hating on it just becuase it is associated with the overall 2026 regs.