Pecking order is based on data collected from Barcelona, its not prediction for how the season why start at Melbourne or end. What is obvious is that some team have already tick the boxes on engine reliability and race simulation run, while some have yet to complete a single lap (Williams) or full race distance.edu2703 wrote: ↑01 Feb 2026, 19:11I think it's unreasonable to make any predictions about the pecking order this early. I myself will only comment on the teams' positions after the last day of testing in Bahrain.
Comments based on an initial test, where one team didn't even run, another only did 65 laps in low-power mode. Teams with different engine modes and test objectives, almost all teams running with a initial-spec car and supposedly with fossil fuel instead of synthetic, are 100% guesswork. I believe almost nothing from the tests in Barcelona gives any insight into what the pecking order will be.
Ted and Craig's opinion, with their "sources," has exactly the same value as the opinions of the users here on the forum, in the Pecking order predictions thread, where some people are even basing their predictions on the appearance of the cars, correlating more developed to faster.
The last time Ferrari started very strong in the season was 2022 with it SF1-75, topping the time sheet on day 1 and day 2 at Barcelona. For 2026, both Hamilton and Charles also finished very strongly on Day Five.
However due to the controversy surrounding the engine compression ratio, it is possible that some teams may not be running their engine at full potential
