Quick 2026 Engine Question...
Quick 2026 Engine Question...
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Scarletpimpofnel

Original Poster:

1,341 posts

38 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I follow Oversteer48's blog, latest here - https://preview.mailerlite.io/emails/webview/10365...

The bit that caught my eye is this: "First, the petrol / electrical split is changing to 50-50. The battery will be increased to 350KW, pretty much three times the previous capacity, and that means the hybrid system now produces around 500bhp. So to compensate, the engine itself will produce less power than it did before, reduced to around 500bhp."

Appreciate he has simplified the regs etc but if I am reading this right do the 2026 engine regs limit electrical power to 350KW and ICE power to 500bhp?

In which case does that mean when the teams engines hit those power levels they cannot exceed them? It seems to me that will stifle innovation in the engine area to eek out more power, is that the case?


MustangGT

13,593 posts

300 months

Yesterday (09:38)
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I read it as battery capacity is 350kWh, not power limited to 350kW.

hantsxlg

913 posts

252 months

Yesterday (10:55)
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350KWh is a HUGE battery capacity. 3x the biggest battery you find in an almost 3 tonne road car. 350KW max power sounds more correct with a 50-100KWh battery capacity.

Otispunkmeyer

13,492 posts

175 months

Yesterday (13:21)
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Yes, no way is it 350kWh. Even the Hummer EV is well short of that. 350 is more like what you'd find on a piece of heavy plant or a EV HGV!

350kW power output definitely. I think about 470hp.

Also I'm guessing these are just "around" figures. The regs will have been aimed at making "about 350kW" the most realistically achievable target. But if you're very clever I don't think there is anything stopping you from being able to make a bit more power from the engine. I presume they are still going to have the fuel rate limit of 100kg/HR was it? I mean that ultimately limits your power output right there.

Edited by Otispunkmeyer on Thursday 25th December 13:25

Piginapoke

5,708 posts

205 months

You are right OP in that the ICE and electric power will be roughly 50/50 in 2026. Electric power is limited to 350 kw, but interestingly ICE power is not limited by regulations. That probably explains the current arguments about the ICE compression ratio, and how Mercedes and Red Bull have apparently found a way to increase it.

Active aero and sustainable fuel will also be key areas nest year- will be fascinating to see how Ferrari cock it up.

Scarletpimpofnel

Original Poster:

1,341 posts

38 months

Piginapoke said:
You are right OP in that the ICE and electric power will be roughly 50/50 in 2026. Electric power is limited to 350 kw, but interestingly ICE power is not limited by regulations. That probably explains the current arguments about the ICE compression ratio, and how Mercedes and Red Bull have apparently found a way to increase it.

Active aero and sustainable fuel will also be key areas nest year- will be fascinating to see how Ferrari cock it up.
This is what I was basically getting at: The battery is limited to a max output of 300KW but the ICE has unlimited power output according to the new regs (but has limited CC/compression ratio etc)?

Whenb I read the blog I quoted from I got the impression that the ICE power output itself was being capped which is not the case right?

Sandpit Steve

13,691 posts

94 months

Link to 2026 technical regs:
https://www.fia.com/system/files/documents/fia_202...

The format of the regulations documents have all changed for ‘26, and there’s a load of new terminology for these PUs.

Section 5 covers power unit specifications, and Page 63 has a handy diagram of the power unit.

350kW is the maximum flow of electrical power between battery and motor, 350kW is also the maximum charging rate.
The battery itself has a capacity of 4MJ, which is just over 1kWh.
Maximum electrical energy deployed is 9MJ per lap.

For the ICE, maximum fuel energy flow at high revs is 3,000MJ/h, for 2026 the fuel wil be synthetic prototype fuel produced for each engine manufacturer.

While there’s many rules regarding the specification and construction of the ICE, there’s no defined limit to its power so teams need to balance performance and reliability. There doesn’t appear to be a rev limit.

Sporting penalties for reliability continue to apply, so each PU component is expected to last for several events.