Era Comparison

How do the regulation changes affect car performance? Comparing qualifying pace, top speeds, and power delivery across the V6 hybrid peak, ground effect era, and beyond.

2014-2021

V6 Turbo Hybrid Peak

Complex aero, MGU-H + MGU-K, ~1000hp combined. Cars reached unprecedented speeds with intricate bargeboards and floor designs.

2022-2025

Ground Effect Era

Simplified upper body aero, venturi floor tunnels. Heavier cars (~800kg) but designed for closer wheel-to-wheel racing. Same PU formula.

2026+

New Power Unit

MGU-H removed, electrical power tripled (120kW → 350kW), active aero introduced. Less total power but more electrical dependency. A fundamentally different power delivery character.

Key Question

The Power Puzzle

With the MGU-H gone and simpler ICE, 2026 cars may have less peak power. But 350kW of electrical power means different acceleration profiles — instant torque vs turbo lag. How will this change driving style?

2026: The Battery Problem

With 350kW of electrical power (up from 120kW) and no MGU-H to harvest energy from exhaust gases, 2026 cars are fundamentally dependent on battery charge. The result? Drivers managing energy like Formula E — lifting off the throttle on straights to conserve battery for the rest of the lap.

Performance Data

What to Watch For

Straight-Line Speed

Ground effect cars initially lost straight-line speed due to increased weight and drag from floor regulations. Watch how top speeds at power circuits like Monza evolved from 2021 to 2024 as teams optimized.

Throttle Application

Without telemetry showing ERS deployment directly, throttle traces reveal how differently drivers manage power delivery. Compare throttle patterns at the same corner across different years.

Corner Speed vs Straight Speed

Ground effect generates consistent downforce through corners but can reduce efficiency on straights. The trade-off shows clearly in sector time comparisons at mixed circuits.

The Formula E Problem

In qualifying, 2026 drivers don't go full throttle until after crossing the start/finish line because the battery depletes before the end of the straight. This energy management pattern — once unique to Formula E — is now a core part of F1 driving style.