Grand Prix The 2026 Australian Grand Prix

In just one week Formula One is back, with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. We are told this is "the most significant change in F1 rules in the sports history". Having watched F1 for too many years, I think this is the fourth or fifth time I have witnessed this happening. But then what is F1 without a bit of hype?

The pre-season testing didn't give a clear "winner", but it did suggest that Red Bull, McLaren, Mercedes and even (shocked face) Ferrari might be competitive. Down at the other end of the grid Aston Martin appear to have had the worst of the off season. The mid-field battle looks busy, with Williams, Alpine (complete with Mercedes motors), Racing Bulls, Haas, and (perhaps) Audi, performing well in testing. Cadillac were not embarrassed in pre-season, but don't look like they will be threatening the front, or even the middle, of the grid in Melbourne.

We have new engine rules, of which there has been much discussion. Personally, I think that this will mean that driver input will become more important. The driver will now have to put some effort into thinking about how to get the best from the combined internal combustion engine and electrical power unit, in the same way that drivers in the early days of turbocharged engines in the 1980's had to change their driver style to overcome the dreaded "turbo lag" (before all those clever engineers sorted it out for them). Senna was believed to be amongst the first to discover that if you dipped the clutch going through a corner, and blipped the throttle, the turbo would be spinning at a higher speed on exit and the car would accelerate faster. I would hope that this group, who we are told are the best drivers in the world (and Lance Stroll) will find a way to make sure there is enough electrical energy to push the car along at full racing speed for most of the lap.

There are also the aerodynamic changes, with a move away from a reliance on ground effect and the introduction of "active aero". DRS is gone, instead, when a car is one second behind another they will be able to use "overtake mode", allowing the driver to deploy more electrical energy rather than relying on lower drag to get past.

Here's a short video which explains things much more simply than I can.


If you are in the UK (like me) and plan to watch things live it's going to mean some late nights and early morning. Here's when our friends at Sky will be broadcasting:

1772188183949.webp


This season will either be fascinating, super competitive, and one to remember through the ages, or 2009, where we pretty knew the outcome of both World Championship at the end of the first race. Let's hope for the former rather than the latter.

Enjoy!
 
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In my lifetime, I can remember many "revolutions" in F1 - most of which had no overall impact on the running order:
  • 1989 - Banning of Turbos. McLaren remained the team to beat
  • 1994 - Banning of driver aids, refuelling re-intrduced - Williams remained at the front, although Benetton did come back into it
  • 1998 - Introduction of grooved tyres - McLaren, having got to the front at the end of 1997 remained there
  • 2009 - New wide front wings KERS allowed, refuelling banned - Brawn stepped to the front with Red Bull
  • 2014 - New Engine rules - Mercedes became dominant, having been 3rd/4th
  • 2022 - Ground effect - Red Bull had reached the front in 2021, and remained there,
  • 2026 ???
In all of these "revolutions", only once was the running order upended - and that was in 2009 - when teams that developed KERS systems were basically screwed by having heavy, low power additions, whilst the non-KERS teams ended up winning everything.
 
There are stories circulating that Aston Martin will do minimal running in practice, look to get within 107% time for qualifying, and the retire both cars at the end of lap 1.

Apparently, the problem is vibration from the Honda engine damaging the batteries and affecting the car handling. Honda asked Aston Martin to strengthen the chassis to make it more accommodating to the know vibration issues but Adrian Newey refused to compromise his design. So now they have a car that doesn't work very well.

This is link in Italian, your browser should be able to translate it - https://it.motorsport.com/f1/news/f...za-di-ricambi-honda-fara-pochi-giri/10801522/


It appears Lawrence Stroll's Dream Team is more of a nightmare.
 
i was listening to bernie collins & apparently that 2014 - 2022 honda & 2026 honda. only share a name because they got rid of everything when they withdrew. all the brains left to go elsewhere & had to rebuild from a shell

although i enjoyed her joke that she was at the 2014 honda 1st test & that 2026 honda is miles better
 
Adrian Newey refused to compromise his design. So now they have a car that doesn't work very well.
Then his hubris gets what it deserves.

How bloody stupid. You would have thought he'd know better.
 
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