STACKS fS: F1 & Cars with Drea & Fred Warner

F1 2026 Changes Explained

24 min · 8 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio F1 2026 Changes Explained

Descripción

F1 has undergone the most radical changes in the history of the sport for 2026, join us as we talk through all the major engineering and technology changes being introduced to Formula One and why. THE 2026 F1 CARS EXPLAINED | ENGINES, ENERGY & ACTIVE AERO Formula One enters one of the biggest technical resets in decades. The 2026 cars still use a 1.6L turbo V6, but the entire energy balance of the power unit has changed. The MGU-H is gone, removing the system that previously harvested energy from exhaust heat and eliminated turbo lag. In its place, the MGU-K becomes massively more powerful, pushing the hybrid system towards roughly 50% combustion power and 50% electrical power. That means battery deployment, regeneration and energy strategy will dominate lap time like never before. On some circuits, teams may even face energy clipping on long straights, where electrical boost runs out before the end of the straight. At the same time, Formula One switches to 100% sustainable fuel. The engines still burn hydrocarbons and emit CO₂, but the carbon comes from captured atmospheric CO₂ or biological sources, creating a closed carbon cycle. Most fuel suppliers are now developing synthetic e-fuels using power-to-liquid technology, essentially turning renewable electricity into petrol. Meanwhile, a technical controversy has emerged around compression ratio measurements, with rival teams questioning whether engine behaviour changes once the power unit reaches operating temperature. The FIA has now clarified the rules to ensure compression remains compliant both cold and hot. On the chassis side, the cars are smaller, lighter and more efficient, with: • shorter wheelbases • narrower tyres • reduced ground-effect tunnels • around 20–30% less downforce The biggest aerodynamic change is active aero, where the car switches between high-downforce corner mode and low-drag straight mode. And with DRS gone, overtaking now comes from electrical boost and energy strategy, where the chasing car can deploy more battery power than the car ahead. Put simply, the 2026 Formula One cars are no longer just aerodynamic machines. They are energy management machines. Hosted by Fred Warner (chartered engineer and strategic business adviser with 25 years experience across F1, aerospace, automotive, EV, rail, & electronics), is joined by Drea Warner, business entrepreneur, avid F1 fan and sales & marketing adviser. #F1 #Formula1 #F12026 #F1Tech #F1Engineering #F1Regulations #F1Technology #F12026Regulations #F12026Engine #F1PowerUnit #F1Hybrid #MGUK #MGUH #SustainableFuel #EFuels #SyntheticFuel #PowerToLiquid Car and aero topics #ActiveAero #GroundEffect #F1Aerodynamics #EnergyManagement #EnergyDeployment #F1Strategy #MotorsportEngineering #RaceEngineering

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5 episodios

episode Monaco F1 Grand Prix 2026 Reaction artwork

Monaco F1 Grand Prix 2026 Reaction

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episode F1 2026 Changes Explained artwork

F1 2026 Changes Explained

F1 has undergone the most radical changes in the history of the sport for 2026, join us as we talk through all the major engineering and technology changes being introduced to Formula One and why. THE 2026 F1 CARS EXPLAINED | ENGINES, ENERGY & ACTIVE AERO Formula One enters one of the biggest technical resets in decades. The 2026 cars still use a 1.6L turbo V6, but the entire energy balance of the power unit has changed. The MGU-H is gone, removing the system that previously harvested energy from exhaust heat and eliminated turbo lag. In its place, the MGU-K becomes massively more powerful, pushing the hybrid system towards roughly 50% combustion power and 50% electrical power. That means battery deployment, regeneration and energy strategy will dominate lap time like never before. On some circuits, teams may even face energy clipping on long straights, where electrical boost runs out before the end of the straight. At the same time, Formula One switches to 100% sustainable fuel. The engines still burn hydrocarbons and emit CO₂, but the carbon comes from captured atmospheric CO₂ or biological sources, creating a closed carbon cycle. Most fuel suppliers are now developing synthetic e-fuels using power-to-liquid technology, essentially turning renewable electricity into petrol. Meanwhile, a technical controversy has emerged around compression ratio measurements, with rival teams questioning whether engine behaviour changes once the power unit reaches operating temperature. The FIA has now clarified the rules to ensure compression remains compliant both cold and hot. On the chassis side, the cars are smaller, lighter and more efficient, with: • shorter wheelbases • narrower tyres • reduced ground-effect tunnels • around 20–30% less downforce The biggest aerodynamic change is active aero, where the car switches between high-downforce corner mode and low-drag straight mode. And with DRS gone, overtaking now comes from electrical boost and energy strategy, where the chasing car can deploy more battery power than the car ahead. Put simply, the 2026 Formula One cars are no longer just aerodynamic machines. They are energy management machines. Hosted by Fred Warner (chartered engineer and strategic business adviser with 25 years experience across F1, aerospace, automotive, EV, rail, & electronics), is joined by Drea Warner, business entrepreneur, avid F1 fan and sales & marketing adviser. #F1 #Formula1 #F12026 #F1Tech #F1Engineering #F1Regulations #F1Technology #F12026Regulations #F12026Engine #F1PowerUnit #F1Hybrid #MGUK #MGUH #SustainableFuel #EFuels #SyntheticFuel #PowerToLiquid Car and aero topics #ActiveAero #GroundEffect #F1Aerodynamics #EnergyManagement #EnergyDeployment #F1Strategy #MotorsportEngineering #RaceEngineering

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