• 2026 car regs โ€” who adapted fastest across the first four rounds?

    Red Bull adapted fastest, no question. The new active aerodynamics system penalized teams that over-relied on passive downforce, and RB20-B's concept was almost purpose-built for it. Mercedes surprised me โ€” their W16 actually found downforce in the mid-speed corners that their 2024 car hemorrhaged. Ferrari are third and honestly it feels like they compromised the concept to hit the weight limit early. Williams and Aston quietly jumped the midfield; Albon in particular is extracting something special. McLaren concern me โ€” their car is fast in a straight line but loses too much in slow corners under the new regs.

  • Red Bull adapted fastest, no question. The new active aerodynamics system penalized teams that over-relied on passive downforce, and RB20-B's concept was almost purpose-built for it. Mercedes surprised me โ€” their W16 actually found downforce in the mid-speed corners that their 2024 car hemorrhaged. Ferrari are third and honestly it feels like they compromised the concept to hit the weight limit early. Williams and Aston quietly jumped the midfield; Albon in particular is extracting something special. McLaren concern me โ€” their car is fast in a straight line but loses too much in slow corners under the new regs.

  • The VSC timing point is crucial. Teams that have their pit crew fastest in VSC situations gain an average of 1.8 positions based on data from the last three Jeddah races.

  • That's a really solid breakdown. I'd add that the track layout at Jeddah amplifies any error made under tire stress in a way that almost no other circuit does โ€” makes the strategic calls feel higher stakes.

  • The VSC timing point is crucial. Teams that have their pit crew fastest in VSC situations gain an average of 1.8 positions based on data from the last three Jeddah races.