
Are the 2026 F1 regulations overcomplicating the sport?
Summary
Top drivers call the new 2026 F1 cars “over‑engineered” and “Formula E on steroids,” fueling debate over hybrid complexity, battery‑mode rules and possible tweaks before the Australian Grand Prix.
The 2026 F1 cars have yet to log a competitive lap, but top drivers are already branding the new formula ‘over‑engineered.’ Lewis Hamilton says you need a degree to understand it, while Max Verstappen likens it to a ‘Formula E on steroids.’ Critics warn the added complexity could alienate fans and blunt overtaking.
The details:
- Power units now deliver roughly half of total output from a turbo‑charged V6 and half from an electric motor, forcing drivers to manage energy every lap.
- Two new battery‑driven modes – Overtake (replaces DRS) and a discretionary Boost – are capped by a finite energy allowance, adding strategic depth.
- ‘Super clipping’ describes a situation where aggressive kinetic‑energy recovery throttles the car despite full accelerator, unintentionally slowing it.
- A five‑second pause before the start‑lights is being trialled, and a possible cap on total electrical deployment is under discussion to tame super clipping.
What's next:
- The FIA, team principals and CEO Stefano Domenicali will review data from Bahrain testing and the Australian debut to decide whether energy‑deployment limits need adjusting.
- Verstappen and Hamilton have urged a simplification of the rulebook; any changes will aim to keep the hybrid direction while restoring a pure‑racing feel.
Original Article :https://www.espn.com/racing/f1/story/_/id/47977970/have-f1-new-2026-regulations-...





