Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

I wonder how many British and European readers who have been to Le Mans on one or more occasion have ever considered crossing the pond and attending the world’s only other top-class 24-hour race? If so, and having been myself to the Daytona 24 Hours for the first time this year, you absolutely should.

If you are a regular Le Mans-goer, you’ll barely believe how different an experience is offered up by the Florida race track in January. For a start a lap is less than half the distance, but there are the same number of cars competing. So you know drivers complain about how hard it is to get a clear lap in France? Well, it’s more than twice as difficult in The Sunshine State. Talking of which, it was 90°F when I left the circuit on Sunday to return to a rainswept, freezing England. Reason enough, some might say, to make the trip.

 

What Daytona lacks relative to Le Mans is an epic circuit full of heart-in-mouth corners. Here you’re either flat out on the banking or negotiating a fiddly infield section of no great distinction. Which ain’t great. But you can also see almost the entire lap from the main grandstand, so following the progress of a favourite car is easy whereas in France it is impossible.

The racing is different too: because of the number of safety car periods and the fact that cars are waved through, it is almost impossible for one driver to pull out a big lead on the field, so the idea is to stay on the lead lap for 22 hours after which all hell lets loose. This year, for instance, the gap between first and second with less than five minutes to go was under 0.5sec. And the closing speed of prototypes on GT cars coming off the banking is extraordinary.

But what I liked most was the atmosphere. The access to everything is easier and better than at Le Mans, there’s no crowding and no whistle-blowing officials telling you what you can and can’t do. Everyone I met at Daytona just wanted you to have as good a time as common sense allowed. In short, I loved it, and I’ll be back.

While in Daytona I was taken for a lap by recently retired racing driver Rob Bell and, as we careened around the banking at a strictly limited 120mph, I was taken back to the last time I was on a banked circuit in the US. Incredibly, at least for me, it was 30 years ago.

The circuit was Talladega, the cars a series of Saab 900s, the purpose to help break as many long-distance class records as possible. An assorted bunch of vaguely trustworthy hacks had been drafted onto the official strength of proper racing drivers to help out, which explains what I was doing there.

I was allocated a 900 Turbo and, after a briefing from none other than Erik Carlsson was sent out to do some practice laps in a spare car while the various record breakers whizzed around at the same time. And what I found was that the circuit was essentially flat out, even in a showroom standard car picked off the line at random by the FIA, but that one of the banked turns required a definite line and a deep breath if the pedal was to be held to the floor. Do that and even 30 years ago a Saab 900 Turbo would lap at an average of 150mph.

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I don’t remember much about being in the car for my small share of the record run – mainly Erik’s advice not to flatten the pitcrew when I came in, because after an hour of never doing less than 150mph, 20mph feels like you’ve stopped. But it can’t have been easy because – if memory serves – the other 900 Turbo doing the record run with proper drivers on board got binned after I left. Which is the only reason that if you know where to look on the FIA’s speed record website, you’ll find my name to this very day, though whether this is because no one has succeeded in breaking the record or that simply no one has tried is not clear to me.

“It was 90˚F when I left the circuit to return to a rainswept England”

In the end that Saab covered 25,000 miles at an average speed of just over 141mph, inclusive of all stops and servicing. Even from this great distance that still seems pretty damn impressive to me.

Ferrari has not only named its new EV, but shown its interior, designed by the Brit who created the iphone, Jony Ive. And what an interior the Ferrari Luce has! The response has been split between those who think it’s Ferrari’s best cabin in 30 years and those who say it’s more suited to a Transit van.

Were you to drill down further into who is saying what, I’d expect to find opinion split more than anything else by age. If you’re old enough to remember peering through the window of a 308 GTB and its descendants in the ’70s and ’80s, I think you’re likely to find the remarkably traditional cabin, complete with three aluminium spoke steering wheel and large, round dials a thing of charm and beauty. If you don’t get the references you might think Ferrari has lost the plot. I find the idea of equipping its most futuristic car with its most retro interior design both novel and appealing. As for the look of it? I’m a child of the ’70s, so I love it.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

1. Australia

Albert Park, Melbourne / March 6-8

The right place for an F1 season to start. For the first 16 laps of last year’s race, the top five ran in their final points order!

2. China

Shanghai / March 13-15

Not the best-loved track but racing here can be good. Features first sprint of the year – remember Hamilton’s 2025 win?

3. Japan

March 27-29

One of the great drivers’ circuits, which is probably why Verstappen is unbeaten in the past four races.

4. Bahrain

Sakhir / April 10-12

Usually one of the better tracks for racing, and an F1 test venue of choice. Piastri won in 2025.

5. Saudi Arabia

Jeddah Corniche / April 17-19

Incredibly high-speed for a temporary circuit, but track limits tend to make racing controversial.

6. Miami

Miami, US / May 1-3

Scene of McLaren’s renaissance in ’24 with Norris, and Piastri won in ’25. Second sprint of the year.

7. Canada

Montreal / May 22-24

One of the great races and venues this year gets a sprint for the first time. Rain can always throw a curveball here.

8. Monaco

Circuit de Monaco / June 5-7

Norris won in 2025 – and cried. That’s because this one’s a classic, even if there’s no overtaking.

9. Barcelona-Catalunya

Barcelona-Catalunya / June 12-14

Reprieved despite new Spanish GP venue. Verstappen’s moment of madness on Russell overshadowed Piastri’s ’25 win.

10. Austria

Spielberg / June 26-28

Russell and Norris have won the past two races. Beautiful setting and decent track, if not as great as Österrichring.

11. Great Britain

Silverstone / July 3-5

Scene of Hamilton’s last ‘on-the-road’ GP victory, but it was Norris prompting flag-waving in ’25. Sprint race on menu.

12. Belgium

Spa-Francorchamps / July 17-19

Few dislike Spa, especially umbrella manufacturers – and McLaren, which took a 1-2 in the Ardennes last year.

13. Hungary

Hungaroring / July 24-26

Track is a bit twisty but it’s a great place to spectate. McLaren unbeaten here in past two years.

14. Netherlands

Zandvoort / August 21-23

Zandvoort’s swansong (for now) gets a sprint for ’26. One of the best tracks in Europe, amid Verstappenmania.

15. Italy

Monza / September 4-6
Italy’s sole F1 venue again after sad dropping of Imola. Scene of start of Verstappen resurgence last term.

16. Spain

Madrid / September 11-13

Brand-new venue for the Spanish GP. Let’s hope they’ve produced a better track than they did in Valencia in ’08.

17. Azerbaijan

Baku / September 24-26

The ‘Macau’ of the F1 calendar features great racing and high drama. Don’t forget it’s on Saturday this year though.

18. Singapore

Marina Bay / October 9-11

For the first time, this event gets a sprint – the last of 2026. Russell and Mercedes hit form to win last year on tricky track.

19. United States

COTA, Austin, Texas / October 23-25

Who will be allegro in Austin? We’ll predict Verstappen, winner of four out of the past five on this modern classic.


20. Mexico City

Hermanos Rodriguez / Oct 30-Nov 1

Full of atmosphere – and track-limits fury. Expect an outbreak of Pérez fever as the crowd’s hero returns to the grid.

21. São Paulo

Interlagos / November 6-8

An absolutely classic track and fervent crowd make this a highlight. Weather can be random at this time of year too>.

22. Las Vegas

Nevada, US / November 19-21

It’s outlasted the old Caesars Palace car park track (just two F1 races). But you’ll need to be up at 4am to watch this one.

23. Qatar

Lusail / November 27-29

Designed for motorcycles, so four-wheel racing near-impossible. Verstappen unbeaten here in past three GPs.

24. Abu Dhabi

Yas Marina / December 4-6

Even if there’s a four-way title fight (see 2010), races here contrive to be dull. And if the title’s all done…

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

Peter Stevens
The celebrated car designer and Picasso of liveries casts his sartorial eye over the looks of the 2026 field

Peter’s Verdict
The strong papaya (orange) upper surfaces contrast with the 2025 rearward sloping black, and will be easily read on the TV. But the very weak numbers ‘1’ and ‘4’ are a missed opportunity for a bit of graphic cohesion.

McLaren
MCL40
After ending the ground-effect era on top, needs to stay ahead with new rules


Lando Norris
Car No 1
Wins 11
Poles 16
Starts 152
2025 position 1st
Aim in 2026 Has to be a second title, with less stress than 2025

Oscar Piastri
Car No 81
Wins 9
Poles 6
Starts 70
2025 position 3rd
Aim in 2026 Recover last year’s early-season form for push at the crown

PETER’S VERDICT
The black, silver and Petronas turquoise take a lovely line from the nose to the front of the halo, but then the turquoise droops over the front of the sidepod and climbs lazily towards the rear. Either the graphic lines should complement the form or attack it.


Mercedes-AMG
F1 W17
If this car’s as good as people say, we may be winding the clock back to 2014


George Russell
Car No 63
Wins 5
Poles 7
Starts 152
2025 position 4th
Aim in 2026 Could be his greatest chance at a title shot, car permitting

Andrea kimi antonelli
Car No 12
Best finish 2nd
Best grid 2nd
Starts 24
2025 position 7th
Aim in 2026 Consolidate on his rookie season and be a Russell back-up

PETER’S VERDICT
The red, yellow and blue always works so well. The minor sponsors get lost within the very strong overall graphic, but it was always the case.

Red Bull
RB22
So many unknowns – engine included – as team regroups from bruising ’25


Max Verstappen
Car No 3
Wins 71
Poles 48
Starts 233
2025 position 2nd
Aim in 2026 Nothing to prove. If car’s halfway there, he’ll be 100% there


Isack Hadjar
Car No 6
Best finish 3rd
Best grid 4th
Starts 23
2025 position 12th
Aim in 2026 It’s a toughie, but do better than Lawson and Tsunoda managed

PETER’S VERDICT
Ferrari claims that its 2026 car is a tribute to earlier liveries, but those were always crisp, clean and added a sense of speed. The new car has a very lazy red-white division line that wanders across the surfaces. Many Ferrari fans have criticised the blue ‘hp’ on the engine cover fin. Bernie Ecclestone would have had the strength of character to say, “You can have red, black or white.”

Ferrari
SF-26
New rules offer chance of a reset, but can they get it right at Maranello this time?


Charles Leclerc
Car No 16
Wins 8
Poles 27
Starts 171
2025 position 5th
Aim in 2026 Lead a title challenge, or look for a new team to lead in future


Lewis Hamilton
Car No 44
Wins 105
Poles 104
Starts 380
2025 position 6th
Aim in 2026 If this is his last year, to go out with a bang, not a whimper

PETER’S VERDICT
A nice contrast of light and darker blue, but a crude colour break across the sidepods interrupts the flow of the scheme.

Williams
FW48
Recent progress and strong driver line-up offers real hope for year ahead


Alex Albon
Car No 23
Best finish 3rd
Best grid 4th
Starts 128
2025 position 8th
Aim in 2026 Has to be to take his first GP win, if car and engine are on song


Carlos Sainz
Car No 55
Wins 4
Poles 6
Starts 229
2025 position 9th
Aim in 2026 Had strong end to 2025, so must finish ahead of Albon

PETER’S VERDICT
What I tend to call the ‘White Bulls’, but there is enough white from above to differentiate Racing Bulls from the senior team.

Racing Bulls

VCARB 03
Given all the uncertainties, staying in the midfield will be a good outcome


Liam Lawson
Car No 30
Best finish 5th
Best grid 3rd
Starts 35
2025 position 14th
Aim in 2026 To make Hadjar regret his promotion to Red Bull’s ‘A’-team


Arvid Lindblad
Car No 41
Best finish n/a
Best grid n/a
Starts 0
2025 position 6th in F2
Aim in 2026 Still so young at 18. Needs to keep his nose clean, then crack on

PETER’S VERDICT
As usual a lovely metallic green, which looks great on TV, but with an insipid yellow line wandering off the nose, then reappearing on top of the sidepods. Soon Adrian Newey’s complex surface changes may spoil the elegance of the car.

Aston Martin

AMR26
First Newey-led Aston design could be the magic bullet, if Honda’s got it right


Fernando Alonso
Car No 14
Wins 32
Poles 22
Starts 425
2025 position 10th
Aim in 2026 To win a GP for the first time since 2013, if the car is up to it


Lance Stroll
Car No 18
Best finish 3rd
Poles 1
Starts 189
2025 position 16th
Aim in 2026 The usual, see 2025: prove he deserves a place in F1

PETER’S VERDICT
There is a strong black-lined, red element to the livery. The whole car looks much more cohesive than in previous years. But, of course, a lack of multiple sponsors can make for a much tidier looking car. I do rate it quite highly.

Haas
VF-26
Aiming to continue good progress made in post-Steiner breakout of 2025


Oliver Bearman
Car No 87
Best finish 4th
Best grid 8th
Starts 27
2025 position 13th
Aim in 2026 Build upon doing a fantastic job to outscore Ocon last year


Esteban Ocon
Car No 31
Wins 1
Best grid 3rd
Starts 180
2025 position 15th
Aim in 2026 Fight back to reimpose himself as a long-term F1 resident

PETER’S VERDICT
If you are not going to complement the lines of the form then don’t chop it in half with a vertical line. The colours are clear and strong and the silver will shine in the sun, but…

Audi
R26
F1 will be somewhat tougher than Le Mans, the BTCC or the DTM


Nico HÜlkenberg
Car No 27
Best finish 3rd
Poles 1
Starts 250
2025 position 11th
Aim in 2026 To provide leadership in new Audi era, and try for second podium!


Gabriel Bortoleto
Car No 5
Best finish 6th
Best grid 7th
Starts 24
2025 position 19th
Aim in 2026 Staying close to Hülkenberg will validate his rookie promise

PETER’S VERDICT
Painting the halo a livid pink breaks up the colour scheme in an unattractive way, but the Alpine blue always looks sophisticated, and the pink will show well on TV. The white-on-pink letter ‘A’ looks to be sliding off the back of the engine cover.

Alpine
A526
More changes of gaffer than Nottingham Forest; at least Merc engines have arrived


Pierre Gasly
Car No 10
Wins 1
Best grid position 2nd
Starts 177
2025 position 18th
Aim in 2026 Same as 2025: maximise what he has in tough circumstances


Franco Colapinto
Car No 43
Best finish 8th
Best grid 8th
Starts 26
2025 position 20th
Aim in 2026 Show his undoubted speed but calm things down a bit

PETER’S VERDICT
Such great expectations for the livery of the new 11th team. The test car had a list of names on the nose, a charming tribute to all the members of the team. This has been replaced by a dark and gloomy, mostly black, livery with sidepods that differ from side to side. Hmm…

Cadillac
CA01
F1’s first new team in 10 years is realistic: get established and make progress


Sergio PÉrez
Car No 11
Wins 6
Poles 3
Starts 281
2025 position n/a
Aim in 2026 Enjoy being an F1 driver after his traumatic Red Bull experience


Valtteri Bottas
Car No 77
Wins 10/span>
Poles 20
Starts 246
2025 position n/a
Aim in 2026 Beat Pérez. This may be a very interesting team-mate match-up


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Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

Recall the two massive Formula 1 regulation changes of the last 12 years: the switch to hybrid turbo V6s in 2014 and the introduction of the ground-effect cars in 2022. In both cases a fundamentally different technical rules set from one season to the next stretched the teams to the limit and changed the competitive landscape as a result. Now imagine changes of that scale being applied to both chassis and power units simultaneously. That’s what we have for this season.

Electrical power has increased by roughly 300% courtesy of suitably bigger batteries, while the power of the internal combustion engine (still a 1.6-litre single turbo V6) has been reduced by around 30% through a reduced fuel flow and compression ratio. It gives a roughly 50/50 power split (actually more like 47/53) between electrical and combustion sources, with a total in excess of 1000bhp.

At the same time, the venturi tunnel ground-effect regulations we saw in 2022-25 have been abandoned in favour of a return to flat bottoms (historically rhyming with the flat-bottom regulations of 1983, which banished the original ground-effect cars).

Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton posted fastest lap of the week at Formula 1’s Barcelona shakedown

Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton posted fastest lap of the week at Formula 1’s Barcelona shakedown

Ferrari

That part of the chassis/aero regulation change was motivated by the wish to create cars which counteracted the teams’ success in subverting the intent of the previous rules to create a more racing-friendly wake. But the more radical part – driver-activated moveable wings and associated power mode variation – came about purely as fixes to the potential problems posed by the vast increase in electrical power.

Fundamentally, pushing a downforce car – which all F1 cars have been since some way through 1968 – through the air costs enormous amounts of energy. So although the power units can deliver in excess of 1000bhp, they cannot do so for very long – because the battery drains its energy store faster than the car can recover it, even though the ERS-k system is now a lot more powerful. The previous ERS-h (energy recovery system – heat), whereby the turbo and an electrical motor transferred energy between each other as needed, has been dropped from the regulations, so making the cars even more energy-starved over the lap. With batteries three times the capacity of before, they are even more so.

Cadillac’s principal Graeme Lowdon was pleased with his team’s progress, although only 165 laps were managed in Spain

Cadillac’s principal Graeme Lowdon was pleased with his team’s progress, although only 165 laps were managed in Spain

Two new features are designed to address this. 1) When its full power is not being deployed, the combustion engine will on occasion be used as a generator for the battery, as a way of partly compensating for the energy starvation. 2) The cars can run with their wings flat down the straights, so vastly reducing the drag and therefore their energy consumption.

Furthermore, the abolition of ground-effect venturi tunnel floors together with the deletion of the rear beam wing has reduced the total downforce of the cars very significantly (helping with energy efficiency). This means they will be noticeably slower through the fast corners.

But the combination of over 1000bhp and super-low drag from flattened-out wings implied potential end-of-straight speeds in excess of 250mph, which was deemed too much. To address that, the power is steadily reduced automatically once beyond a pre-set speed. So the cars accelerate super-fast out of the corners (because the batteries, which deliver instant torque, are so much more powerful) but the end-of-straight speeds should be similar to before.

They are the most complex technical regulations F1 has ever produced, all rooted in the target of achieving that 50/50 electrical split in a downforce car. Yet paradoxically the technology of the power units is simpler: the deletion of ERS-h, a lowered compression ratio (from 18:1 to 16:1) and a reduced fuel flow limit (to around 70% of what it was, though now stipulated in energy flow – 3000 megajoules per hour – rather than mass flow) all make it easier for a new manufacturer to master the technology, which was the aim. Simpler engines, way more complex rules.

“It’s roughly a 50/50 power split with a total in excess of 1000bhp”

Drivers can choose the balance between harvesting and deploying energy through the lap, just as they will choose between the two wing modes (ie: downforce or low-drag). Furthermore, when a car is within 1sec of the one in front, the driver can activate an overtake mode harvesting more electrical energy than is otherwise available from the software and then making use of it anywhere on the lap. This replaces the previous drag reduction system. In addition even to that, there is a boost button whereby all harvesting can be cancelled to give full deployment of both electrical and combustion.

2026 Tech

Shorter, lighter, narrower

One of the primary focuses of the FIA on its rewrite of the regulations was the problem of the bulked-up, flabby Formula 1 cars of recent years, with the aim of creating more agile machinery with smaller dimensions and carrying far less weight.

For the 2026 cars, the maximum width has been reduced from 20cm to 190cm, while the wheelbase comes down by 20cm – from 360cm to 340cm. The floor has also been reduced by 15cm, the target here being to cut downforce and compel teams to run greater ride height.

The tyres will be narrower, with the aim of reducing drag: they will still be mounted on 18in wheels, but the width of the front tyres has been reduced by 25mm and the rears by 30mm.

This season’s grand prix cars will be 30kg lighter, with the minimum weight coming down from 798kg to 768kg (722kg for the car and driver, plus 46kg for the tyres).


Active aero

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Two active flaps on the front wing can be opened, below, to give more speed

The return to flat bottoms and elimination of venturi ducts means a 30% cut in downforce, but this is more than offset by ‘active’ aerodynamics, with 55% less drag. There is a high-downforce mode to maximise grip in corners, above left and right, and a low-drag mode, bottom left and right, to increase top speed and allow more chance of overtaking. Drivers can change aero configuration regardless of the gap to their opponents (DRS, now gone, could only be activated within 1sec of the car in front).

A new Manual Override Mode – or Overtake Mode as it is now known – allows drivers to use the electric motor on straights for a longer time than the car ahead.

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Closed for slow speed but opened, below, for low drag – and overtaking

As for the wings, the front has two active flaps, while the rear consists of three elements to ensure proper balance between the front and rear axles. The wheel arches, which were adopted as partial fairings of the wheels in 2022, will also disappear.


The difference in power between an attacking driver with plenty of battery energy stored and a defending driver who has emptied his store trying to stay ahead is going to be greater than before. It seems likely therefore that the main overtaking action will move to earlier on the straights.

A further complication of that 50/50 energy target: those bigger batteries weigh a lot more and the cars were already deemed too heavy. The solution has been to reduce the maximum wheelbase (from 360cm to 340cm) and track (200cm to 180cm). The minimum weight limit has been reduced by 30kg to 770kg. And tyres have been made narrower (by 25mm at the front and 30mm at the rear), saving around 5kg.

Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar, despite crashing in wet conditions in Spain, was complimentary about the RB22’s handling

Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar, despite crashing in wet conditions in Spain, was complimentary about the RB22’s handling

Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar

There’s a potential irony here, though. The better the tyres are at transferring the power, the more energy-starved the cars are going to be. Partly for this reason the original plan was a much greater reduction in tyre size, with smaller diameter rims – until Pirelli pointed out that going too far in that direction would make the tyres overheat, thereby making the cars less raceable. It’s a yet-further manifestation of how this rules set is pushing against the edges of feasibility.

Managing energy more efficiently than the competition is going to be the key to success in this formula – and that will ask a lot of both car and driver. And the fuel is 100% sustainable for the first time. With the fuel flow limit measured as energy usage rather than weight, the energy density of the fuel will be a key component of that efficiency. The greater the fuel’s calorific value, the less of it will be needed for the same energy. So we’re going to see an arms race between the fuel companies. Petronas will be fuelling all Mercedes PUs, Shell all the Ferraris, ExxonMobil the two Red Bull Powertrains teams, Aramco the Honda PU in the Aston, and BP/Castrol the Audi team.

Sidepods look like they’ve been borrowed from an old F1 era; the idea is to minimise dirty air

Sidepods look like they’ve been borrowed from an old F1 era; the idea is to minimise dirty air

Mercedes

That is the radically altered basic framework the teams will be working within. Whereas the initial divergence in car design seen in the first year of the 2022 formula had converged to a general shared concept by last season, this re-set has again triggered divergence. The release of the new cars and their first running at Barcelona gave us our first clues of how the teams have responded.

In terms of what the teams are trying to achieve aerodynamically, it all seems to centre around minimising the inwash of the front wheel wake. But how they’ve gone about doing that varies a lot.

“Managing energy is going to be key to success in this formula”

Acritical detail of the FIA’s new chassis regulations is the reintroduction of bargeboards. These were banned from 2022 so as to limit how much teams could direct the front wheel wake outwards (outwash), which had a bad effect on the turbulence created behind them. But these new compulsory bargeboards are designed to do the opposite of those previously created on the teams’ own initiative; they are aligned to direct the front wheel wake inwards (inwash). This poor-quality airflow being introduced into the underfloor will reduce the downforce it creates.

So teams are desperately trying to: a) minimise the effectiveness of the inwashing barge boards; and b) generate as much outwash as possible elsewhere.

Mercedes’ PU

Rivals have complained about Mercedes’ PU and its compression ratio

2026 Tech

Power unit: efficiency explained

With the aim of reducing emissions and costs, the new generation of engines are still hybrid, but are different to the old (A). They will probably be the most efficient engines in the world, with almost 300% more power produced by the battery (D).

Gone is the MGU-h, the electric generator that captured energy from the heat of the exhaust and the rotation of the turbo (B). The MGU-k (C), the electric motor that recovers energy under braking and pushes the car on acceleration, is strengthened from 160bhp to 470bhp, while the internal combustion engine drops from 750bhp to approximately 550bhp for a total power output of over 1000bhp.

There is a smaller tank for the new synthetic e-fuel (E – 90kg, down from 110kg), which captures CO  from the air, with the emissions (F) further reduced.

A: Combustion engine
B: Turbo
C: MGU-k
D: Battery
E: Fuel tank
F: Emissions


Mercedes’ reaction to the regulations is the W17, featuring a very distinctive high-nose design and wide sidepod which stops a long way above the floor edges, creating a big channel to the ‘coke bottle’ section in the lower rear bodywork, apparently maximising the flow around the diffuser wall to speed up the air extraction from the underfloor (thereby increasing downforce). This car, in the hands of George Russell and Kimi Antonelli, ran by far the most laps in its three days of Barcelona testing and for much of it was the quickest (though pipped to fastest single lap on the final day by Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari). The car’s speed and reliability gave the impression of a team that hit the ground running better than anyone else. But these are early days and perhaps we simply saw more of this car’s potential than that of the others.


The higher the car’s nose, the greater the airflow capacity which can be fed to the underfloor, but there is a complex regulation combination which determines how high the nose can be. Essentially the closer the cockpit is to the front axle line (and both cockpit and front axle positioning have some allowance), the higher the nose can be. The potential downside of bringing the front wheels and cockpit closer together is that it can make outwashing the front wheel wake more difficult. There is a trade off to be made – and one which is then set for the season.

DRS is replaced with an Overtake Mode

DRS is replaced with an Overtake Mode

Getty Images; Red Bull

Straight Mode lowers drag for extra speed

Straight Mode lowers drag for extra speed

Getty Images; Red Bull

Mercedes appears to have favoured the high-nose approach, much more so than Ferrari. Consequently, the Ferrari’s under-nose volume – and the amount of undercut of the nose underside – is visibly smaller. The aero team has clearly favoured a different trade off to Mercedes, yet in their early testing form at least, their lap time potential appeared similar.

Fans will want to see Lewis making frequent use of Overtake Mode

Fans will want to see Lewis making frequent use of Overtake Mode

Getty Images; Ferrari

Boost will assist  his attack – or defence

Boost will assist  his attack – or defence

Getty Images; Ferrari

Ground effect era has gone…

Another fundamental change for 2026 concerns the underbodies of the new cars. The ground-effect era of 2022- 2025 is now over, and from this year onwards flat floors between the two axles have been mandated.

The drawings compare the pre-2026 Formula 1 underbody, in black, with that of the new-generation cars, in red. Wing-car designs have therefore been consigned to history, just as they were in 1983 – albeit this happened at the 11th hour – after the ban on side skirts.

The lateral venturi ducts will therefore disappear, and only a small extractor will be permitted, at the rear axle. To minimise the effects of this, aerodynamicists will likely opt for a ‘rake’ set-up, with the front lower than the rear, taking advantage of the flat underbody and rear diffuser to recover some of the downforce that will be lost with the coming into force of the new regulations.

2025 car: venturi tunnels encouraged downforce grip

2025 car: venturi tunnels encouraged downforce grip

2026 car: flat floor means ground effect is greatly reduced

2026 car: flat floor means ground effect is greatly reduced


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The Red Bull RB22 was the next quickest car, though an Isack Hadjar accident limited the number of laps. Its engine ran reliably and Hadjar was hugely complimentary about its driveability. He shared with Hamilton and Russell a general enthusiasm for how much nicer these cars are to drive than the ground-effect ones. “The car feels a bit more predictable, more simple, easy to play around with,” Hadjar said. “We have less load in the fast corners but they feel nicer.”

“It is different,” added Russell, “but once you wrap your head around it, it feels quite intuitive. Also you can really feel the car is smaller and how much lighter it is.”

“We have a lot less downforce than previous years,” Hamilton said. “The car generation is actually a little bit more fun to drive. It’s oversteery and snappy and sliding, but it’s a little bit easier to catch and I would definitely say more enjoyable.”

“You can feel the car is smaller and how much lighter it is”

McLaren’s MCL40 wasn’t as quick as the identically powered Mercedes, but it’s an elegant-looking design, with a notably aggressive treatment of the front wing and endplates suggesting a very serious attempt at maximising that crucial outwash behind the wheels.

Fighting talk from George Russell who says the new Merc feels more like a racing car than the 2022 new regs W13

Fighting talk from George Russell who says the new Merc feels more like a racing car than the 2022 new regs W13

Mercedes

The RB22 made a big impression visually, with tiny sidepod ‘tubes’ creating a massive undercut and a huge area of exposed floor around the coke-bottle section to feed around the diffuser wall. But when Adrian Newey’s Aston Martin AMR26 appeared, it made the Red Bull look plain. The sidepods shared the Red Bull’s tube-like shape but stopped well above the floor line. But the most startling detail was the height of the upper rear wishbones, which fed into the rear wing pillar. It’s speculated that in action, these could go some way to replicating the function of the banned beam wing. The car got in only a few laps, none of them quick, and it’s believed that the Honda power unit is only at an early stage of development. But the idea that this might be the car which returns Fernando Alonso to the front is an incredibly tantalising one.

Who knows what this is all going to look like come Melbourne on March 8.

Adrian Newey’s new AMR26 has us all waiting with bated breath…

Adrian Newey’s new AMR26 has us all waiting with bated breath…

Cadillac

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Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

My right arm rises to chest height, my forearm and wrist on the diagonal, fingers bent forwards at 45 degrees. I push my elbow forward to simulate rotation; the internationally approved representation of oversteer; track driving’s very own version of air guitar.

The kindly, white-haired gentleman standing in front of me grins and I stop myself mid-sentence, a lump suddenly obstructing my throat. This is an absurd moment even by the standards of this privileged ‘job’. “Steve, how many times did you have just such a conversation with Ayrton during the 1988 season?” I eventually splutter. Steve Nichols smiles and replies simply, “Many times.”

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Nichols N1As are handcrafted and will be individually tailored for owners; each will be unique

Jaime Walfisch

The opportunity to discuss chassis dynamics with Steve Nichols is just one of a number of remarkable things about the Nichols N1A, a new road-legal track-day supercar with a gilded bloodline. It’s been a long time coming: CEO of Nichols Cars, John Minett, has had the dream to produce a new British sports car for decades, coming close to purchasing embattled TVR from its Russian owner Nicolai Smolenski back in the late 2000s. When that deal didn’t materialise he kept pushing, for a while contemplating the resurrection of the Elva marque, before forming the company’s branding around his business partner, Steve Nichols.

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The N1A has a family resemblance

Jaime Walfisch

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McLaren M1A – the team’s first self-produced racing car

Bernard Cahier/Getty Images

Minett has decades of experience in automotive and racing, but Utah-born Nichols surely needs no introduction in these pages. Let us not forget this is the engineer who played a key role in the creation of the first carbon-fibre grand prix car, the McLaren MP4/1; who was Niki Lauda’s race engineer; designed the most successful grand prix car of all time and surely one of its most beautiful, the MP4/4; and was Senna’s race engineer for two seasons. Alain Prost took him to Ferrari for 1990 as chief designer and, well, you know the rest…

“Nichols CEO John Minett has had the dream to produce a new British sports car for decades”

This is one good reason to buy an N1A even before you’ve driven one, because as brands go, Nichols has cast-iron credentials, despite its embryonic status. It’s also a project that calls upon the pair’s black book of contacts in an exceptional way, mobilising some of the brightest minds in the UK’s fertile motor sport and engineering ‘valley’, some who have semi-retired and who have been keen to contribute exactly because of the people at the helm, and the nature of the project.

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Steve Nichols with Ayrton Senna and the MP4/4

Sutton Images

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Indicators – for much overtaking on the road

Jaime Walfisch

The N1A takes its inspiration from Bruce McLaren’s first eponymous car, the M1A of 1964 – a Group 7 open sports car, powered originally by an Oldsmobile V8, that competed in the precursor to the Can-Am series. Of course, once that championship began in 1966 the firm would become one of its key protagonists, starting with the M1B. Yet the N1A is far from a replica: its form is unique, subtly but deliberately modernised, and under the skin it’s very different –considerably more advanced.

“The heart of any Can-Am-esque car has to be the engine and that means a very angry V8”

Nichols has opted for a bonded aluminium construction, eschewing carbon fibre on cost grounds but wanting something much stiffer and safer than the tubular frames of the ’60s. That chassis has been designed with the help of Bob Mustard, the godfather of such technology at the BMW Rover Group in the 1990s, which led to the Elise and a lot more besides. For the N1A, the team has incorporated the rear subframe into the bonded structure, and also reinforced structural sections with carbon fibre. A carbon front subframe is on the way.

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Simplicity itself

Jaime Walfisch

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Writer Adam Towler has his instructions from Nichols at Spain’s Guadix circuit

Jaime Walfisch

“This is an authentically analogue driving machine and not a car to be trifled with”

The heart of any Can-Am-esque car has to be the engine however, and frankly that means a humongous and very angry V8. In the case of the N1A there will eventually be a range of options available, but the first 15 cars are to Icon88 specification, a special edition honouring the 15 wins scored by the MP4/4 in the 1988 F1 season. The car I’m driving today is the mysterious ‘No16’ pre-production example; I’ve christened it Jean-Louis

Sixteen currently runs a Chevrolet LS7-based 7-litre V8, running on individual throttle bodies, prepared by Nichols’ designated engine partner Langford Performance Engineering, famed for its Cosworth DFVs and assorted Ford F1 engines, among others. This currently produces around 700bhp, but as this test takes place, Langford is testing the definitive motor built up from LS components to a more bespoke spec. A wholesome 730bhp is being claimed for these units. Drive is sent though the tried and tested Graziano six-speed manual ’box, as used on the Mk1 Audi R8 and manual Lamborghini Gallardo, with the delicate, slim gearlever mounted on the sill. The N1A is right-hand drive, like sports prototypes always have been, but you change gear with your right hand.

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Aerodynamics were assisted by hours in a wind tunnel

Jaime Walfisch

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The ‘11’ button sits at the top

Jaime Walfisch

“This is an authentically analogue driving machine and not a car to be trifled with”

A classical double wishbone suspension layout is suspended by four-way adjustable dampers from Quantum Racing, and in the case of the Icon88, carbon ceramic brakes and (in time) carbon wheels, shod with Michelin Cup 2 tyres. Suspension consultancy has been carried out by another famous name: suspension guru Richard Hurdwell worked with Senna on the active Lotus-Honda 99T in 1987.

That road-legal rubber has quite a task ahead of it. Sixteen still has development panels in glass-fibre, but even so weighs only 900kg with fluids. The carbon-bodied production car will weigh 890kg wet, so to save you doing the maths, with the 730bhp motor that’s a spectacular 820bhp/ton. A rapid track day car like a Porsche 992.1 GT3 RS boasts 370bhp/ton; a Bugatti Chiron Super Sport, 791bhp/ton. Hmm. Nichols says he’s done some aero work to negate lift, but hasn’t chased downforce. There is ABS, and spark-based traction control set-up, but the message is as loud, clear and strident as the Chevy’s thumping note at idle: this is an authentically analogue driving machine and most definitely not a car to be trifled with.

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Who are you today, Bruce McLaren or Chris Amon?

Jaime Walfisch

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7-litre V8 – and an incredible noise…

Jaime Walfisch

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I’m sitting in the N1A in a deserted pitlane at the small but pleasingly challenging Guadix Circuit in southern Spain. Visor up, there’s a moment of serenity with the V8 silenced, yet the impending violence from those trumpet stacks just aft of my shoulder blades seems to soak into the cockpit all the same. My view over the low set perspex aero screen shows little of the car in front, but I feel a little high – as if I’m on top of the car, not in it. Nichols promises a new seat mounted lower is on the way; in fact, there will be three seat options, right up to a moulded insert around the driver. The wheel is too much of a stretch for me as well, but again, any customer of an N1A will spend time in a seating buck before their order is taken to tailor the perfect driving position.

The cockpit is attractive and reminds of the Wheeler TVR approach, in that it looks better than it actually works; in sunlight it’s hard to see confirmation that a button is selected. The most prominent button is at the top of the centre stack and simply says ‘11’. I won’t press it to begin with.

Thumb the start button and the V8 booms into life. Reach for the delicate little lozenge of a gearlever on the sill and navigate the open gate into first; the throw is light. The gear knob is the actual one used by Ayrton to win the 1990 Monaco Grand Prix. Production cars will have a replica of it.

When you boot up the N1A it runs a ‘normal’ engine map, which is to say it makes just over 300bhp. That equates to a power-to-weight ratio similar to a Lotus Exige, so it feels quick, but also manageable and not particularly intimidating.

The unassisted steering is as direct as you might expect, but you only notice the weight building in slow corners, exacerbated today because of the position of the wheel. It’s not an issue, more part of a fabulous dialogue that lets you build a picture of the forces at work, and a real understanding of what’s happening at either axle. When the N1A starts to slide, you know about it.

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Note the golden gearknob, which is the real one Senna used when winning the 1990 Monaco GP

Jaime Walfisch

Temptation being what it is, it doesn’t take long for me to turn things up to ‘11’ –literally. I actually depress the button while using full throttle, and yet the N1A suddenly bolts forward as if from a cartoon. The noise level doubles. All hell breaks loose.


This is the full Can-Am, surround-sound experience. The rate of acceleration is as vivid as the numbers suggest, and the roar from the V8 so visceral it’s making my brain oscillate inside my skull, and my eardrums buzz with the frequencies – even inside a full-face helmet. There isn’t a supercar, or hypercar for that matter, that offers such a brutal, unfiltered experience, and at Guadix the N1A is barely able to reach fourth gear. It’s only afterwards that I reflect on how the Nichols balances precariously on the precipice between raw exhilaration and occasional moments of terror. It’s wild.

“Temptation being what it is, it doesn’t take long for me torun things up to’11’”

My time with the car out on the public road is brief, only long enough to report that on admittedly smooth surfaces it rides well and is happy to amble around without a hint of the mayhem it’s possible to unleash.

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At just under 900kg, the N1A has a similar weight to early Can-Am spec cars of the day – but with more comfort for the driver

Jaime Walfisch

At around £500,000 the N1A is a notable investment for a track-day car, but it’s hard to see how you can have a bigger thrill and, frankly, racing credentials come no finer than those of the N1A.


Nichols N1A

Engine 7-litre Chevrolet V8
Chassis Bonded aluminium sheet extrusions and carbonfibre panels
Power 730bhp
Transmission Graziano manual six-speed (with Ayrton Senna-inspired gearknob)
Suspension Independent front and rear with double wishbone
Wheels Magnesium front   11in x 15in and rear 16in x 15in
Weight 890kg
Max speed 180mph+

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Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

1956 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing

Sold by Artcurial, £3.7m
This Gullwing drew triple the usual price for two reasons – firstly, it was original and unrestored; secondly, it had a remarkable story. Bought new by Frenchman Claude Foussier, Olympic clay-pigeon shooter and director of Pernod-Ricard, it spent 21 years in storage at the château of a subsequent owner. He sold it to a German enthusiast who kept it in a sealed bubble, still covered in the dust from its days in hibernation, before selling it in 2024 to Artcurial’s vendor. Who, by bizarre coincidence, lives at Foussier’s old Paris home and saw it auctioned 70 years and one day after it was built.


1995 Aston Martin DB7 coupe with manual gearbox, early production model sold by Manor Park Classics for £5,635 at auction.

1995 Aston Martin DB7

Sold by Manor Park Classics, £5635
An Aston for Nissan Micra money? No MOT and some demon rust lessened the appeal but it had covered just 65,000 miles, featured a desirable manual gearbox and it was only the 22nd DB7 built.


1934 Citroën Kégresse P17E half-track expedition vehicle sold by Bonhams for £30,700, historic off-road model inspired by the Croisière Jaune expedition.

1934 Citroën Kégresse P17E Half-Track

Sold by Bonhams, £30,700
Never mind Land Rovers – if you really want to go anywhere get a Kégresse. This is the type of vehicle company founder André Citroën sent across Asia to undertake the 1931 Croisière Jaune expedition.


1972 MG Midget race car in red with white roundel, freshly built competition-spec example sold by The Market for £11,750.

1972 MG Midget

Sold by The Market, £11,750
If you spent the winter in your shed pouring money into creating a Midget race car, look away now – this one was a freshly-built example fitted with all the best bits. Impossible to build for the price.


1971 Alpine A110S 1600 S works rally car in blue, ex-Ove Andersson Acropolis Rally winner, restored to original specification and sold by Gooding Christie’s for £207,800.

1971 Alpine A110S 1600 S

Sold by Gooding Christie’s, £207,800
This A110 was campaigned by the works team, scoring a win at the 1971 Acropolis Rally with Ove Andersson at the wheel. Derelict in 1985, it was restored to original specification six years ago.


2007 Piaggio Vespa LX 125 Ferrari Edition in red with Cavallino badging and suede Schedoni saddle, one of seven made, sold by RM Sotheby’s for £68,200.

2007 Piaggio Vespa LX 125 Ferrari Edition

Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £68,200
Mad money for a modern Vespa but this is a Ferrari Edition. One of seven made, it featured Cavallino badging and a saddle trimmed in suede by Schedoni, famed for its luggage and race car seats.


1999 Bentley Continental R Millennium in black, one of 10 built, sold by Bonhams for £71,300.

1999 Bentley Continental R Millennium

Sold by Bonhams, £71,300
Here’s a pub quiz question: what was the most expensive regular production car you could buy in 1999? Answer: this £250k Bentley Continental R Millennium. This was number one of just 10 built.


1985 Ferrari 288 GTO in red, low-mileage one-owner example sold by RM Sotheby’s for £5 million world-record price.

1985 Ferrari 288 GTO

Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £5M
If you had this sitting in your garage, you would probably be tempted to drive it. Unlike its one owner who covered only 15,000 miles since acquiring it new – and a mere half a mile since 2010. The result: a world-record price.



Forthcoming sale highlights

  • Bingo Auctions, City Circuit, Tokyo bay, Japan, March 14
    Bingo auctions was set up in Japan in 2017 and hosts sales in conjunction with the Tokyo Auto Salon and Suzuka race circuit. In January, the firm set a record for an Alpina BMW Z8 at £363,500 and is hoping for similar success at this event, which is being held on Tokyo’s state-of-the-art urban kart track.
  • Bonhams, Stafford, April 25-26
    Spring wouldn’t be spring without the annual Bonhams Spring Stafford motorcycle sale. This edition, as ever, will feature the entire spectrum of powered two-wheeler history with lots dating from the late 19th century to the present day. Star of the show will almost certainly be a 1965 MV Agusta 500 Four grand prix racer that’s tipped to fetch £220,000.

Related article

  • Collector Cars Auctions, Lyon, France, April 26
    This Lyon-based business was started in 2023 by Arnaud Faucon and Marion Quesne, two experienced operators from the worlds of automobile and art auctions. The firm stages live and online sales, with this Flat Six event being dedicated to the Porsche marque. It will be held at Lyon’s Palace Garage, an automobile storage and concierge facility.
  • H&H, Pavilion Gardens, Buxton, April 29
    H&H returns to the spectacular Victorian park in the Derbyshire spa town. Lots include a 1987 Ford Capri 280 Brooklands that’s covered just 20,000 miles (and looks sure to breach its £28,000 high estimate) and a gleaming white Austin Rover Mini Moke. Coming from the owner of 34 years and with a mere 8000 miles on the clock, it could fetch £18,000.
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

May 14, 1972,
Moanco
Round 4 in F1’s 1972 season was a damp date in the principality. ‘Rainmaster’ Jacky Ickx, at the wheel of a Ferrari 312B2, would have enjoyed the conditions, finishing second. He was the only driver not to have been lapped by BRM’s Jean-Pierre Beltoise. It was Beltoise’s only F1 World Championship victory, and BRM’s last win.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

If anyone tries to tell you that less can’t be more, suggest they compare a regular Porsche 356A with a Speedster version. The latter can be worth two or three times as much as the former, despite it being way more spartan.

US Porsche importer Max Hoffman had the idea of creating the Speedster in 1954, partly in a bid to enhance the appeal of the 356 among younger, less-wealthy buyers.

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Disc wheels retain correct domed hubcaps

Historics Auctioneers

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Steep-raked windscreen is quickly detachable for track use

Historics Auctioneers

With its stripped-down aesthetic and basic weather gear, it was really intended to be a budget 356 – but by combining the A model’s already improved suspension, brakes and structural rigidity with the Speedster’s lighter weight, bucket seats and an easily removable raked windscreen, the car’s potential for the track was not lost on many racing drivers.


It’s thought that 4854 Speedsters were built before the model was replaced by a full convertible in 1958, with the large majority being sent to the US. This car was among them, but was imported into the UK a decade ago – complete with documented history from new.

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Centrally positioned rev counter hints at ‘driver’s car’ spec

Historics Auctioneers

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Wood-rimmed steering wheel was standard fit

Historics Auctioneers

Related article

Subject to a major restoration completed in 2017, it benefits from a full repaint in metallic silver, new trim and a fresh hood and is described as a turnkey example – which, sensibly, lives in a heated, de-humidified garage and doesn’t get used on Britain’s sometimes salt-strewn roads unless the weather is right.

With another £22,000 having been spent within the past four years and that all-important history file, it could be one of the best Speedsters in the country.

Just don’t expect much in the way of luxuries for your money.

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Bucket seats – but due to the age, no seatbelts

Historics Auctioneers

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1600cc, 60bhp engine is in pristine condition

Historics Auctioneers


1957 Porsche 356A Speedster
On sale with Historics Auctioneers, Ascot, March 7. Estimate: £290,000-£325,000. historics.co.uk

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

Modelling is much more than just a simple hobby. It can be an escape from reality and a good investment. Don’t think you need to be a master modeller. The essential quality here is patience! Enter the world of high-end 1:8-scale model kits.

I recently completed Pocher’s lovely Gulf-liveried Porsche 917, inset, and it’s something special. The first thing to remember with these kits is they take up a lot of space as the end product is about 2ft long – but cased and properly displayed it’s like having a museum piece.

In the early years models at this scale were plastic; more recently they were marketed as a partwork – a monthly subscription service to receive pieces and build as you go along. This method never caught on here but is popular in Europe through Hachette or Panini. DeAgostini offered Lewis Hamilton’s McLaren MP4-23 in the UK, a subscription over two years. It was plastic and while fun to build wouldn’t be an investment piece. The latest wave of large-scale kits are better quality and assemble into something quite substantial.

A great example is the IXO range, or browse the selection from Agora Models or Fanhome. Building kits like this is rarely about re-sell value, but the enjoyment of building and owning a statement piece. However, I have seen certain kits double in value, even unbuilt!

Models of iconic cars have a rub-on association with the real thing, such as James Bond vehicles, classic Ferraris or Aston Martins. Many are also very limited editions so they’re scarce.

My tip is to buy a complete kit and build at your own pace rather than use subscription services, and follow the experts who have previously built them, highlighting any tricks or issues. Once complete, display them proudly in a case. Should you be tempted to move kits on, you may be pleasantly surprised.


Andrew Francis is director at The Signature Store. thesignaturestore.co.uk


Michael Turner signed prints

Commissioned by John Surtees and created by the legendary motor sport illustrator Michael Turner – who died in December – these six artworks, 21in x 17in, are limited to 50 numbered prints, each signed by Surtees and Turner.
£99.95 each, thesignaturestore.co.uk


N+ x Mercedes F1 electric bike

An electric bike with a Formula 1 twist. N+’s offering boasts AMG F1 branding with a sequential gearbox, Pirelli tyres and is capable of 25mph. Currently if you buy this, the range-topping Rallye Edition, you also get the lesser-powered City variant for free. £6990, nplusbikes.com


Popup garage display sets

The issue with a Hot Wheels addiction is where to actually put those 1:64 wonders. Problem solved thanks to Pop Up Garage, which offers display stands ranging from high-end dealerships to petrol stations and high street scenes (mini KFC anybody?). From £49, popupgarage.store


Retro circuit canvas

These circuit posters are guaranteed eyecatchers, especially if you chose the Nürburgring one with its heaps of helpful info. Take your pick from a host of famous world circuits, or even obscure ones – like GingerMan Raceway in Michigan. From £32, racingcanvasco.com


Boss x Aston Martin sweater

Leave nobody (or more likely everybody) in doubt about what you drive thanks to Aston Martin’s new tie-up with Hugo Boss. We like this wool-blend sweater bearing the famous winged logo. Subtle. Available in light brown, above, or dark blue. £229, hugoboss.com


Scalextric transit & escort

Something different and achingly cool for your 1:32-scale slot car set-up. Scalextric’s latest twin pack combines a Ford Motorsport Transit Mk1, flatbed trailer and Escort Mk1 for full 1970s rally vibes. And they all run on track too. £109.99, uk.scalextric.com


Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

This is a story that traces its origins back to the 1970 Turin Motor Show, when the still fresh-faced Lamborghini revealed a baby brother for the Miura. It was called Urraco and its 2.5-litre V8 engine was claimed to produce some 220bhp. It was the first ‘baby’ Lamborghini, designed to compete with the likes of Ferrari’s Dino 246 GT and the Maserati Merak. Today this is its direct descendant, the Temerario, a car still with a V8 engine, but now displacing 4 litres and producing more power. Quite a lot more power in fact: 907bhp to be precise.

Are you impressed? Or are you wondering where this is going to end? Or both? This is an output no Can-Am car enjoyed until the era of the turbocharged Porsche 917/10. Formula 1 cars didn’t race with that level of power until the mid-80s turbo era. Yet here it is, not just in a Lamborghini road car, but its junior sports car offering, with the Revuelto flagship producing a four-digit output.

For me, how it deploys its power is of far greater interest and importance and, on paper, despite that enormous output, things don’t look great. For a start, this is the car that replaces the Huracán, trading a naturally aspirated 5.2-litre V10 engine for a twin-turbo 4-litre V8. It’s also put on around 180kg of mass, less than I expected given the car is physically larger and packaged also to include a battery pack and no fewer than three electric motors, two at the front, one at the back, but still an enormous amount of additional heft to cart about.


I think it looks great, a masterly piece of design given how much stuff it contains and how much cooling air it must require to keep temperatures under control. It’s also a lot more user-friendly than previous Lamborghini sports cars (I don’t include the Audi Q8-derived Urus in this). There’s more space inside and, at last, a deeper windscreen offering much improved visibility, finally fixing one of my biggest complaints of Lambos from days gone past. And despite its enormous complexity, so long as there’s someone on hand to provide a five-minute tutorial, even I can learn how to master the basic functions of its infotainment system, something I’d not say about many a prosaic shopping car these days.

There might not be a sweet V10 symphony behind you; instead it’s V8 warfare.

There might not be a sweet V10 symphony behind you; instead it’s V8 warfare.

So it’s less intimidating than you expect when you set off. It’ll do a handful of miles (well, three) in electric mode, which should at least allow you to clear your neighbours before the engine – unrelated to all the myriad 4-litre V8s available in other VW Group products – chimes in.

The music of the V10 has gone, replaced by that hard-edged growl of other flat plane twin-turbo 4-litre V8s made by Ferrari and McLaren. What it will do is rev beyond speeds of even any naturally aspirated supercar engine to date, let alone turbo units. Lamborghini says the motor is good for 10,000rpm. The car I drove had a hard limiter at 9800rpm but I won’t hold that against it. Get there and it’s like a small-scale war has broken out behind you.

Despite the cacophony and the power (in excess of 900bhp) this Lamborghini feels like a car you can trust

Despite the cacophony and the power (in excess of 900bhp) this Lamborghini feels like a car you can trust

How fast? I have no idea. I only drove it on the road. What I can tell you is that under full load in a low gear straights barely exist. What is perhaps more illuminating is how manageable it still feels, largely because of the way the hybrid system works to eliminate lag. Even left in its standard driving mode, mid-range punch is delivered instantaneously and with no drama other than the noise, and even that’s contained until you select a racier mode and it starts injecting neat fuel into the exhaust manifold just so you can hear it pop and bang. I wonder how long it’ll be before the fun police ban that particular game too?

“It is the magic that’s been missing from far too many Lambos”

But none of that really surprised me. What did was how confident I felt while driving it. The fact I wasn’t expecting to have much in the way of amusement in a Lamborghini with over 900bhp may indeed surprise you, but the truth is I’ve not always felt at home behind the wheel of four-wheel-drive Lambos, other than specialist equipment like the Huracán Sterrato and Aventador SVJ. It was only when the company produced rear-drive versions of the likes of the Diablo and Huracán that I started to bond with them.

Related article

Lamborghini unveils V12 hybrid Gran Turismo concept car
Motorsport News

Lamborghini unveils V12 hybrid Gran Turismo concept car

The Lamborghini V12 GT features a V12 hybrid engine and provides clues to the company’s future plans Lamborghini has unveiled a virtual concept car that hints at the company’s future production…

By Jake Williams-Smith

No such problems here. Despite the weight, the Temerario is superbly damped. You can place the car with confidence on the way into the corner, keep the engine singing through the apex and then use your bottomless pit of power to propel you.

The point is this: you’ve always known where you are in this car’s chief rivals, the Ferrari 296 GTB and McLaren 750S. And it is that sense of trust which is the ultimate determinant of how enjoyable they are to drive as their makers intended. It is the magic that’s been missing from far too many of the recent and not so recent Lamborghinis. It’s back now, and I hope that this time, it’s to stay.


LAMBORGHINI TEMERARIO

LAMBORGHINI TEMERARIO

  • Price £216,408
  • Engine 4.0 litres, eight cylinders, petrol, turbocharged, hybrid drive
  • Power 907bhp
  • Torque 538lb ft
  • Weight 1800kg (DIN)
  • Power to weight 504bhp per tonne
  • Transmission Eight-speed double clutch, four-wheel drive
  • 0-62mph 2.7sec
  • Top speed 213mph
  • Economy 25.2mpg
  • CO2 272g/km
  • Verdict A Lambo with the fun factor.

Vw that time forgot

VWs old school hot-hatch still packs a punch

This is the 10th season of this generation of Polo and VW has not seen the need to update it much. Punchy performance when needed, not that this is a car without flaws. The ride is adequate. Even so, if you wanted a quick, uncomplicated petrolpowered fast hatch, it is well worth a look.
Verdict: Uncomplicated and fun.


New giulia set for ’26

Alfa will sit on shared Stellantis platform

Later this year Alfa Romeo will replace its Giulia saloon, easily the most highly regarded Alfa of recent times. It will have batteries and electric motors in place of ICE. It probably doesn’t sound promising, but I’ve never judged a car before driving it and don’t propose to start now.


Porsche about turn?

Confusion over Cayman and Boxster EVs

Rumours are circling concerning the future of the Cayman and Boxster. A report by Bloomberg claims the EVs may be canned. So much depends on how readily the EV platform lends itself to being turned into petrol or hybrid. The drawback is the EV approach adds considerable added mass – a headache in a two-seat sports car.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

The year is 1965 and 33-year-old French screen star Jean-Paul Belmondo is cruising the streets of Paris in his freshly acquired Ferrari 275 GTB with his girlfriend Ursula Andress in the passenger seat.

Does it get anymore ‘playboy’ than that? Probably not, which is why the Ferrari in question drew a stream of admirers at January’s Rétromobile show, where it was displayed on the Girardo & Co stand with a discreet ‘for sale’ notice.

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Rosso Rubino paintwork

Belmondo, who died five years ago at the age of 88 after a life decidedly well-lived, became a global heart-throb thanks to his starring roles in films such as Breathless (1960), That Man from Rio (1964), The Brain (1969) and, later in his 50-year career, Animal (1977) and Ace of Aces (1982).


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Ferrari F40 in its purest form is set for auction
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Ferrari F40 in its purest form is set for auction

An early example of Ferrari’s F40, in classic Rosso Corsa, is set to cross the block at RM Sotheby’s Tailored for Speed Collection sale, with an estimate of more than £2m

By John Evans

But it was during the mid-60s that Belmondo enjoyed his golden era, with the fame earned from his fast-paced acting career landing him on the cover of Paris Match where he was shown driving at speed, top down, in a Ferrari 250 GT cabriolet.

It was loaned for the shoot by car supplier to the stars Franco-Britannic Autos, establishing a relationship between owner Donald Sleator and Belmondo that led to the man they dubbed ‘the French Steve McQueen’ buying the 275 GTB in July 1965. Before collecting it, however, Belmondo asked for a front ‘bumperette’ to be fitted to account for the Paris traffic, a Blaupunkt radio so he could listen to his favourite tunes while on the move, and a passenger headrest for the comfort of Andress – aka Honey Ryder who sent jaws to the floor when she emerged from the sea wearing a revealing white bikini in the 1962 Bond film Dr No.

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Belmondo owned the car for four years

But while Andress may have been the era’s ultimate trophy girlfriend, that didn’t prevent her from being a nag – and she didn’t hold back in telling Belmondo, whom she met the previous year on the set of Up to his Ears, that the 275’s original Grigio Argento paint job was not to her liking.

So before Belmondo even took possession of the keys it was off to Carrosserie Henri Chapron (of Citroën DS Décapotable fame) for a respray in the Rosso Rubino it wears today, a colour that contrasts nicely with its Pelle Rossa interior and nero fabric seat trim.

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Documentation of its ’60s pomp

Owning the short-nose, triple-carburettor 275 GTB automatically made Belmondo a member of an exclusive club of silver screen legends who chose the model, among them Clint Eastwood, Peter Sellers and McQueen himself.

Belmondo kept the car until March 1969 when he part-exchanged it for a Maserati Ghibli. It has had but three owners since, one of whom kept it cosseted in a Parisian garage for 28 years.

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Chrome ‘bumperette’

Offered in superb but unrestored condition (save for a recent engine rebuild) and a contestant in the Post-War preservation category at last year’s Pebble Beach concours, the 275 appears for sale after four years in the current ownership.

Girardo & Co has been coy about its price – but it’s fair to say you’ll need a movie star’s salary to own it. And a partner who likes Rosso Rubino, of course.

1965 Ferrari 275 GTB
On sale with Girardo & Co, Oxfordshire, £POA. girardo.com


Nuvolari Alfa that topped Ards 1-2-3 

  • At a sodden Tourist Trophy at Ards in 1930, this Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 GS Testa Fissa, inset, right, blew a raspberry to the Blower Bentleys when Tazio Nuvolari took it to first in an Alfa 1-2-3. Later owners included Prince Aly Khan and Whitney Straight – a racer who’d become a hero RAF pilot in WWII. It’s on sale at Vintage & Prestige in Northampton for £2.75m.

  • Doors have opened at Dick Lovett Porsche Centre Bristol after an 18-month refurbishment. A further 25,000sq ft has been added to the site, with aftersales capacity expanded to a 17-bay workshop. “It’s amazing to head back to the location where Dick Lovett Bristol has been for 22 years,” said Dick Lovett property director Rebecca Maloney.
  • In 1982 you’d have seen Duran Duran frontman Simon Le Bon on MTV dancing around on a yacht, wearing a yellow suit. By the end of the decade he had far better taste, being the first owner of this 1989 Aston Martin V8 Zagato Volante, left. Mileage is low – just 5920, and Le Bon only accounted for 200 of those before selling the car in 1996. It’s on offer for £330,000 at Stratton in Norwich.
  • According to German market research company Dataforce, the new car market share of SUVs in Europe has risen to 60% – up from 41.3% in 2020. Hatchbacks are down to 24% and saloons 3.5%.

  • We revealed four years ago that pop duo The Cheeky Girls had traded in stardom for life in the car showroom. Gabriela and Monica Irimia were previously sales execs with Hyundai. They’ve now switched to Audi York and Audi Boston. LG
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

We’ve previously mentioned on this page that Chopard co-president Karl-Friedrich Scheufele has an obsession with classic cars, so it was no surprise to find him unveiling a watch at January’s Rétromobile show in Paris.

The Zagato Lab One Concept was born from a long-standing partnership with the historic coachbuilder which grew out of a friendship between Scheufele and Andrea Zagato, the grandson of Carrozzeria Zagato’s founder, Ugo. The two men met as competitors in the Mille Miglia, which led to Chopard becoming the sponsor of Scuderia Zagato and to creating two previous Zagato watches – one in 2013 and the second in 2019 to mark Zagato’s centenary. But this new model is way more radical than both.

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By Rob Widdows

Conceived with the input of Zagato’s design chief Norihiko Harada, the Lab One Concept takes inspiration from the coachbuilder’s reputation for achieving lightness through the use of tubular frames that make for extreme rigidity with minimum weight.

Made from ceramicised titanium, the 42mm case features ingenious articulated strap lugs in the form of miniaturised chassis tubes and houses a 207-part hand-wound movement supported by a network of further tubes surrounding the ceramicised titanium dial.

This results in a watch weighing just 43.2g.Its lightness makes it totally unobtrusive to wear – but when an owner glances down to double-check they haven’t lost their watch, they’ll see the 60-second tourbillon whirling in its aluminium carriage supported by a bridge based on the spokes of a car steering wheel.

Other subtle automotive tropes include a main plate subtly embossed with Zagato’s ‘Z’ logo in repeat and a ‘fuel gauge’ power reserve indicator to show how much of the hand-wound movement’s 80 hours of autonomy remains, while the crown takes the form of a tiny gearbox cog engraved with the steering-wheel logo.


“It was difficult to construct a watch case in a similar way to a Zagato car,” said Scheufele. “The tubular ‘chassis’ was inspired by Zagato’s road and racing models and the titanium movement was developed for it. The result is the lightest watch we have ever made. I wore the prototype for six weeks and it is as though you do not even have a watch on your wrist.”

Just 19 will be made, the number being chosen to commemorate Zagato’s founding on April 19, 1919. And with Chopard insisting that the price will only be revealed on application, you can bet they won’t be cheap.

Chopard Zagato Lab One Concept, £POA. chopard.com


 

Tudor, already a sponsor of Racing Bulls, has enhanced its motor sport credentials through a three-year deal with the HERO-ERA rally organisation and in its role as Dakar Rally timekeeper. Following January’s Saudi edition, the winner of each category was presented with a Ranger watch engraved with their team number – but you can get the look without the agony as regular versions of the Ranger can now be had. Choose from dials in black or Dune White, above, 36mm or 39mm case sizes and nylon straps or steel bracelets.

Tudor Ranger, from £2700. tudorwatch.com


 

This carves another notch on the bedpost commemorating watch brands that Aston Martin has snuggled up with. It started with Jaeger-LeCoultre in the early 2000s, moved briefly to Richard Mille, then to TAG Heuer, Girard-Perregaux and, most recently, Timex – which we reported only last month. Breitling promises a multi-year partnership which kicks off with this Navitimer chronograph dedicated to the F1 team. It’s limited to 1959 examples and features a titanium case, a carbon-fibre dial and a strap based on a racing harness.

Breitling Navitimer B01 Aston Martin F1, £8900. breitling.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

If you thought politics were swept out of IndyCar racing when the CART/Champ Car–IRL split was resolved, think again. Leaning heavily on his friends Roger Penske and the Fox Corporation, US president Donald Trump signed an executive order on January 30 to create an IndyCar race to be staged this summer called the Freedom 250 Grand Prix of Washington DC. The event, round 15 of 18, is intended to “recognise the historic milestone of America’s independence in addition to celebrating the unparalleled tradition and legacy of America’s motor sports industry”.

Scheduled for August 21-23, the Freedom 250 has been wedged into one of the few gaps in IndyCar’s tight summer schedule, meaning the season will now wrap with five consecutive race weekends, including a Milwaukee doubleheader and a pair of 5000-mile round trips to the West Coast. The race will be run on a yet-to-be-revealed street course near the National Mall, with free admission to the public. It has not been explained how the event will be funded.

The politics surrounding the Freedom 250 are not typical racing ones such as engine supply rules or noise abatement regulations. It’s about the perception of IndyCar aligning itself with the Trump administration during a time of extreme political strife in the US.

Trump’s controversial leadership – most graphically illustrated by images of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents beating and killing American citizens in their zeal to identify and remove illegal immigrants – has left the US more divided than at any time I have seen in my lifetime. And now a pop-up IndyCar race has been thrown into the mix.

IndyCar maintains that any politics surrounding the Freedom 250 are being created from the outside. After all, business is business, and when the president asks (or decrees), you don’t say no. But reaction among fans was swift and predictably fell along party lines. Known Trump supporters on my social media feed couldn’t hide their enthusiasm: “Got my tickets and my Airbnb!” Meanwhile, Trump’s detractors quickly declared they were “done with IndyCar”.

“Business is business, and when the president asks, you don’t say no”

It’s no secret that Penske is tight with Trump – in October 2019, just weeks before Penske bought the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the IndyCar Series, Trump (in his first term) awarded Penske the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honour in America.

More recently, Fox became the sole broadcaster for the IndyCar Series and purchased a one-third interest in Penske Entertainment, the company that operates IndyCar and the Speedway.

It looks like the ‘buddy system’ is very much in effect here, and its polarising effect on IndyCar’s fanbase was immediately clear. Some say the Freedom 250 is a fantastic opportunity to boost IndyCar’s profile and bask in the national spotlight, potentially with a level of attention only achieved by the Indianapolis 500. Others insist it’s a bad look for IndyCar to participate in what they envision as a Nuremberg-like campaign rally for the president, all being beamed live coast-to-coast on Fox.

NASCAR leaned heavily into the patriotic American theme last July when it announced a race weekend on the grounds of Naval Base Coronado near San Diego, California set to run in June. The event, conceived by NASCAR, and with a focus on the 250th anniversary of the US Navy, recently picked up title sponsorship from a major US defence contractor. NASCAR rarely misses a chance to beat the All-American drum, but its Anduril 250 has escaped the political stigma of IndyCar’s Washington DC race.


Will the furore over the Freedom 250 be prolonged, or just a tempest in a tea-cup? Month of May attendance at Indianapolis will provide a big clue.

NASCAR’s third-tier Truck Series celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2025, and believe it or not, might be the most interesting American championship to follow for casual observers.

The RAM (formerly Dodge) brand is returning to Truck competition after a lengthy absence with five full-time entries, including a rotating ‘Free Agent’ truck that will be driven in the season opener at Daytona by US racing legend Tony Stewart. Another RAM will be occupied by 21-year-old Mini Tyrrell, who topped a driver shootout documented in an eight-episode reality TV series called Race for the Seat. Always happy to moonlight, Cup Series star Kyle Busch plans eight Truck races in a Chevrolet.

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The Trucks are a support series for IndyCar at St Petersburg for the first time, and around Christmas a rumour emerged that Dario Franchitti would be in the field. In early February, it was confirmed. This buddy system involved seven-time Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson (now Legacy Motor Club team co-owner) arranging a ride in a Tricon Garage Toyota for his good friend when he learned about Franchitti’s enthusiasm for the St Petersburg street course.

Between duties with the Ganassi IndyCar team, his development driver role for Gordon Murray Automotive and a full slate of vintage racing, Dario has plenty on his plate. His first venture into NASCAR since 2008 doesn’t suggest a professional comeback.

“This was just a chance to race on a circuit I love [Franchitti won in IndyCar in 2011],” he said. “If it goes well, great. If it doesn’t go well, I’m going to be blaming Jimmie.”


Based in Indianapolis, John Oreovicz has been covering US racing for 33 years. He is author of the 2021 book Indy Split

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

On February 5, 1966, Roger Penske made his official debut as an entrant or racing team owner, fielding a Chevrolet Corvette L88 in the year when Daytona International Speedway’s endurance race was extended to 24 hours. Penske, then 28 years old, was a very successful driver racing against the likes of Dan Gurney, Jim Hall and Carroll Shelby, but he was more interested in pursuing a business career and had recently acquired his first Chevrolet dealership. Dick Guldstrand, George Wintersteen and Ben Moore drove the No6 Corvette to the class victory at Daytona for GT cars over 3 litres, setting the stage for Penske to become the most successful team owner in the history of US motor sport.

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Roger Penske in Porsche-badged overalls, SCCA Regionals, Daytona, 1960

Porsche

“I remember testing the 917 at Weissach when it was just the track and a barn”

Fast forward 60 years and the story of the 2026 Daytona 24 Hours could have written itself. After setting the pace in homologation testing and practice leading up to the race, Porsche Penske Motorsport dominated this year’s edition of America’s twice-round-the-clock classic, leading 521 of the 705 laps to earn Porsche’s record 21st overall Daytona victory. On the 60th anniversary of Team Penske and of the Daytona 24 Hours, the only aspect of the result that wasn’t Penske perfect from a PR perspective was that the No7 Porsche 963 triumphed while the No6 (a number associated with Team Penske from the beginning) only managed fourth.

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From left: Mark Donohue, Roger Penske and Penske engineer Don Cox, Weissach, 1971

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Remarkably, Penske’s connection with Porsche spans even longer. He came to prominence as a driver in a series of Porsche Spyders in the late 1950s, then fielded the fearsome turbocharged 917-10 and 917-30 in the SCCA Can-Am Challenge in the early ’70s. In that same era, Penske created the International Race of Champions, a long-running all-star series that challenged a dozen luminaries who competed the first year in colourful, equally prepared Porsche 911 Carrera RSR racing cars.

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Driving a 718 RS 60, same day

More than 30 years later, Porsche again teamed with Penske to earn three consecutive LMP2 championships with the evocatively named RS Spyder in the American Le Mans Series from 2006-08. When the 963 hybrid programme was created for the 2023 LMDh regulation set in the FIA World Endurance Championship and the IMSA SportsCar Championship, Penske was the logical partner team. And the Porsche/Penske partnership has delivered, winning the 2024 WEC crown as well as the two most recent IMSA titles.

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Penske-entered Corvette, 1966 Daytona 24 Hours

“Sports cars are where I started personally, and the success we’ve had over the years with Porsche really began with me driving an RSK Spyder back in my early days,” Penske said. “I believe I had 28 race wins in my career behind the wheel of a Porsche, and it really marked the start of a strong partnership together.

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Penske LMP2s, ALMS, ’06

“I remember testing the 917 at Weissach with Mark Donohue when it was just the track and a barn… you go there today and it’s like a small city.

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Penske and 2026 Daytona 24Hours winner Felipe Nasr

Porsche has such great tradition and a special legacy in racing. Their commitment to winning has always aligned well with our own goals and objectives. When we were looking to return to full-time sports car competition and build a programme under the new global formula, it made perfect sense to partner with Porsche on a new alliance for the future. It’s been pretty special to renew the relationship.”

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963 No7 crosses the line, 2026

IMSA

This was the third consecutive overall Daytona win for the No7 Penske Porsche, with Felipe Nasr anchoring all three of them. This year, Nasr was joined by Julien Andlauer and prototype rookie Laurin Heinrich, while the No6 car was shared by Kévin Estre, Laurens Vanthoor and Matt Campbell, a trimmed-down driver line-up in the wake of Porsche’s withdrawal from WEC.

“Felipe has done some great driving for us, and that’s probably one of the best drives I’ve seen”

The No7 Porsche established itself as favourite in the first half of this year’s 24 Hours before dense fog caused most of the overnight portion of the race – more than six and a half hours, or 121 laps – to be run behind the safety car. But the record crowd was rewarded by more than two hours of green flag racing to conclude the event, producing a tense battle between Nasr and Jack Aitken in the pole-winning (and last-starting due to a skid block violation) No31 Whelen Cadillac co-driven by Earl Bamber, Frederik Vesti and upcoming 19-year-old NASCAR star Connor Zilisch. They ran nose-to-tail for almost the entire final stint before Nasr finally pulled away at the end to win by just 1.569sec.

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A Porsche 1-2 was widely expected

IMSA

“Felipe has done some great driving for us, and at the end there, that’s probably one of the best drives I’ve seen,” Penske said. “For our 60th anniversary, it’s a big deal, and to have three wins here at Daytona is certainly special. It starts out the year the right way.”

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Penske’s road-going 963 alongside Daytona’s safety car.

IMSA

Penske generally spends all 24 hours of an endurance race participating from the pitbox, but this year’s bizarre fog spectacle gave him an excuse to catch a rare few hours of rest in the motorhome. The man known as ‘The Captain’ still holds a torch for sports car racing after all these years, and the Le Mans 24 Hours is the only major prize in racing that has eluded a man who boasts 20 Indianapolis 500 wins and almost as many IndyCar championships. Porsche’s decision to withdraw from WEC (and Le Mans) must have been personally devastating.

IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship

Sunglasses required by an IMSA pitlane official

IMSA

“The bizarre fog spectacle gave Penske an excuse to catch a rare few hours of rest in the motorhome”

At least Penske has the prospect of cleaning up again in IMSA this year as a consolation. Many competitors were surprised when the Porsches were not hit by a Balance of Performance adjustment after the two Penske factory cars running in Evo trim and the private 2025-spec JDC-Miller MotorSports 963 were frequently fastest in pre-race Roar Before the 24 testing. But they couldn’t say anything without risking sanction, because IMSA recently added a clause into the rulebook similar to the one instituted by the FIA for WEC that prohibits competitors from publicly commenting about the controversial, data-driven method of levelling the playing field.

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Winter sunshine in Florida but fog would affect the race overnight

IMSA

“Balance of Performance is a necessary part of our sport,” said IMSA president John Doonan. “We have 18 auto manufacturers racing in this sport with all the different platforms, all the different powertrains, and all the different aero. It’s incredibly important, to produce the incredible show that we want, to have BoP. We’re all in the business of growing the sport, not tearing it down. I think the sport of endurance sports car racing is tricky enough to understand, and we want to educate people on what Balance of Performance is and how it works. It’s incumbent on us to communicate that more. But in short, we shouldn’t be airing out our issues in public.”

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Officials say 2026 was an all-time record attendance for the Daytona 24 Hours

IMSA

The competition therefore had to be careful in choosing its words when describing what it saw as Porsche dominance. “I had hoped that we could hold our own, but that wasn’t the case,” said poleman Renger van der Zande after starting the race in the No93 Meyer Shank Acura ARX-06 that ultimately finished fifth. “That was a very demotivating stint. I’m afraid that’s the last time we’ll see the Porsches for the rest of the 24 hours. They’re just playing with us.”

“What really scares me is that Porsche doesn’t really show everything at the start of the race, and they build up such a big lead [about 20sec in the first three hours],” added Cadillac driver Ricky Taylor. “They’re definitely the ones to beat and I’m worried they have even more tricks up their sleeve.”

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Pratt Miller Corvette in the pit

IMSA

IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship

Gradient’s Mustang

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RS1’s 911 lasted five laps

IMSA

They were lucky there was essentially one Porsche to battle, because the No6 car incurred floor damage early in the race after contact with an LMP2 car, and despite multiple stops during the extended overnight caution for repairs, it never regained the same kind of speed as the No7. The No6 Porsche finished fourth, trailing the No31 Cadillac and the No24 BMW M Hybrid V8 driven by Sheldon van der Linde, Dries Vanthoor, Robin Frijns and René Rast over the line.

“The guys did a good job at repairing as much as they could,” Kévin Estre said. “But when the floor is damaged, you cannot do much. We did our best.”

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Then the fog rolled in…  A yellow flag was waved at 12.46am; a green flag followed at 7.19am to restart the race

Brandon Badraoui/IMSA

“The Porsches were impressive. We came after them as best we could. I got close a few times”

The Whelen Cadillac did a great job recovering not only from being sent to the back of the grid but for incurring a Stop+60sec penalty when Zilisch failed to halt for a red light at the end of the pitlane during the fogged-out portion of the 24 hours. Aitken used the final caution of the race to regain the lead lap, moved up to second place and gave Nasr all he could handle in the closing hour, but it was not enough.

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Cadillac No31 gave the leading Penske Porsche a battle

Jürgen Tap/Porsche

“The Porsches were impressive,” Aitken said. “We came after them and tried to challenge them as best we could. I got close a few times but just didn’t have quite enough to get the move done. It was a fine line from making a gap open or just causing a bit of an accident.”

“That was pure racing; I used everything I had,” Nasr added. “They had a lot of pace, and especially their traction zones were really good. All I did was just drive with my heart and drive from what I know from my experience. I’m just pleased it went our way.”


Most disruptions in the race were caused by wayward crashing LMP2 cars, the class eventually won by CrowdStrike founder George Kurtz with team-mates Alex Quinn, Toby Sowery and Malthe Jakobsen in the No04 ORECA 07 LMP2. The GTD PRO class victory went to the No1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3 Evo and drivers Neil Verhagen, Connor De Phillippi, Max Hesse and Dan Harper. Like the Whelen Cadillac that finished second overall, the PMR BMW started from the back of its class after having its front-row qualifying time disallowed; Harper demonstrated great flair by completing the last hour of the race without radio communication to hold off the 75 Express Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo, which sported an all-star driver line-up that included Supercars champion Chaz Mostert and IndyCar legend Will Power – who, at 44, was making his first Daytona start.

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No6 Penske Porsche had to be satisfied with fourth

Lumen Digital Agency

“I definitely plan to come back,” Power said. “I expected tough competition, but I like just how much fun the driving is.”

“Those last two and a half hours were absolutely insane. That’s how it is, I guess – rock’n’roll”

But it was the Pro-Am GTD class that brought the crowd to its feet in the closing stages thanks to an epic duel between Philip Ellis in the No57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 and Nicki Thiim in Magnus Racing’s No44 Aston Martin Vantage Evo. Crossing the start/finish line of Daytona’s epic tri-oval with 10min remaining, the two cars touched and snapped into lurid slides that the drivers were lucky to catch. Ellis held off Thiim under braking into Turn 1 and was able to remain in front to the end.

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A first look at Michelin’s prototype Pilot Sport endurance tyre

Lumen Digital Agency

“It was super-tight with Nicki and to be fair, I think I just misjudged it a little bit,” said Ellis. “I’m happy that we both continued and nothing bigger happened. Then we put on a good fight and a good show. I spoke to Nicki and I think everything is good. It was a hard-fought battle, very on edge. I’m super stoked that we came out on top.”

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“Those last two and a half hours were absolutely insane,” Thiim told SportsCar365. “It was good fun up until the one move up there [the bump in the tri-oval]. Normally I’m so calm, but that’s the first time in my career I’ve been yelling in my helmet. It was just too much, hitting me on the rear at those speeds. That’s how it is, I guess – the American way, rock’n’roll.”

The 2026 24 demonstrated that Acura still has plenty of single-lap speed, Cadillac may be the most consistent over the duration of a race, and there are early signs that BMW’s decision to make WRT its partner team across WEC and IMSA will pay dividends. But it’s hard to see any of them overcoming the crushing competence of Penske and Porsche, which always find a way to execute perfectly when it counts. Porsche Penske Motorsport may be stronger than ever with an influx of WEC personnel, a consolidated driver line-up and full focus on the IMSA side of the programme.

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Clear conditions as night fell

Getty Images

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Penske Porsche No6 collided with an LMP2 racer which led to repeated pitstops through the night

Porsche/Jürgen Tap

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LMP2 winner – the No04 CrowdStrike ORECA

Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI, Lumen Digital Agency

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Cheering on the Meyer Shank Acura frontrunner

Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI, Lumen Digital Agency

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GTD Pro victors – Paul Miller’s BMW crew from car No1

Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI, Lumen Digital Agency

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Winward’s Mercedes- AMG GT3 Evo was top of the GTD class

Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI, Lumen Digital Agency

AUTO – 24 HOURS OF DAYTONA 2026

AF Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 Evo No21 – fifth in GTD

Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI, Lumen Digital Agency

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American driver Colin Braun – a winner here in 2023; ninth in ’26

Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI, Lumen Digital Agency

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From left: Porsche Penske’s Laurin Heinrich, Julien Andlauer and Nasr; this is Nasr’s third consecutive Daytona 24 Hours triumph


Daytona – a chip off the old block

Why the 24 Hours is family focused for John Oreovicz

I covered IndyCar for most of my career but started attending the Daytona 24 Hours frequently in the early 2000s, sometimes just to escape the Indiana winter and socialise with friends. Almost nothing remains the same. Daytona’s 3.56-mile road course is intact, but the stadium around it has been modernised to industry-leading standard and the bland row of strip malls across International Speedway Boulevard has grown beyond recognition.

The product on the track has also been transformed, from the homely Daytona Prototypes run under Grand Am sanction prior to the 2014 American sports car merger to today’s IMSA, with five manufacturers fielding high-tech, Le Mans-eligible LMDh Prototypes and more on the way. And like most IMSA events over the past few years, Daytona announced a record attendance.

My son has accompanied me to races since he was a toddler, often out of single-parent necessity. Patrick is now 19, and the Daytona 24 Hours is his must-attend event. This year, he stayed for all 24 hours capturing footage, even in the overnight fog. His favourite car? The Jaguar XJR-10 driven by Zak Brown in the historic support race.

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John Oreovicz and son Patrick at Daytona in ’25 – both are regulars here

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Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

Formula 1’s regulations paradigm shift has stirred a sleeping giant from its slumber. The Silver Arrows, once invincible in racking up an unprecedented 15 out of 16 drivers’ and constructors’ titles from 2014-21 before the complexities of the ground-effect era confounded it, was on ominous form in pre-season testing. The competitive picture is too ill-defined to know whether Mercedes really has grasped the opportunity to haul itself back to top billing, but a combination of metronomic running in the Barcelona test and rumbling from rival camps suggest it’s in the game. Trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin’s statement that “I don’t think we could have hoped for a better three days of testing” exudes quiet assurance.

George Russell was immediately installed as title favourite, but the strength of the Red Bull package that started the subsequent Bahrain test strongly makes team principal Toto Wolff cautious. He warns that “we haven’t yet proven that we have a package that is good enough”. That reflects not only the reality that the first test doesn’t count for much, but also the chastening effect of the tough years that taught him to ease pressure through expectation management. Yet despite that, he doesn’t downplay the satisfaction taken from early testing performances.

“We feel enthused by going into this new environment,” says Wolff. “It’s obvious you wake up with more of a smile if your car is quick and the early indications that we had were positive that at least it doesn’t look like a turd and we’re midfield. It looks like we have something that we can build upon. Generally, we are happy but with the scepticism of knowing that we haven’t got reliable data of the other usual suspects.”

Drivers are always tight-lipped about how good a car is in testing, but in retrospect admit they recognise a poor machine almost immediately. Russell echoes Wolff’s sentiments by at least ruling out the possibility that the Mercedes W17 will be a bad car.

Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, during testing in Barcelona

The paddock is its usual cauldron of rumours but tongues are wagging about the strength of Mercedes’ W17

Mercedes-Benz AG

“You know when it could be a really bad car and you can highlight those negatives early on,” says Russell. “We don’t believe it is, but is it a car that can produce a world championship?”

That’s the key question, one that doubters will scoff at. They will justifiably cite the struggles of the past four years as evidence this isn’t the team it once was. Mercedes swung between overconfidence and befuddlement during what team principal Toto Wolff called its years of “false dawns and lots of theories”. The results from 2022-2025 were respectable, with five grand prix victories and two years as runner-up in the constructors’ championship, but by the sky-high standards of Mercedes they were a failure. Forever a step behind during those years, first running ultra-low ride height but plagued by terrible porpoising and mechanical bouncing troubles, then running a little too high on ride height as

“We haven’t yet proven that we have a package that is good enough”

others found performance pushing lower, later playing catch-up on flexi-wings and struggling in warmer temperatures, Mercedes never became the benchmark. Even the excuse that it couldn’t catch up after the terrible start with the infamous zero-sidepods car of 2022 doesn’t hold water given customer team McLaren emerged as a title-winner having initially been far behind.

The elimination of the venturi tunnels and the return to a largely flat step-plane floor take F1 back to the future, creating regulations closer to those under which Mercedes thrived. The underfloor still works in ground effect, but far less powerfully so than before. To add to that, the change to a notional 50/50 split of conventional V6 and electrical power deployed by the MGU-k means brand-new power units.

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George Russell relaxes during pre-season testing in Bahrain. He is the bookie’s favourite for the F1 title this year, and  Mercedes is odds-on for the constructors’ championship

DPPI

Even before testing began, expectations were high for Mercedes. But pointing to ostensible similarities in the cars to those before 2022 and the fact it had by some margin the best power unit when the last generation of hybrid engine was introduced in 2014 was never a compelling argument. The goalposts have moved too far, on the chassis side by the simplification of aerodynamic geometries and in power unit development by the fact these are all-new designs with the MGU-h eliminated and a design process more about refining existing technologies than developing new ones. The quality of the opposition is higher too, with rivals avoiding the mistakes of 2014 by ensuring development work on both counts started early.

“Even before testing, expectations were high for Mercedes”

So why the optimism? Firstly, before the power units ran on track for the first time, there were rumours about Mercedes being ahead of the rest. There was potentially a kernel of truth in this given several mechanisms for spreading such information – personnel moving jobs, the usual gossip that spreads like wildfire in the F1 paddock and the regular reporting of progress by all power unit manufacturers to the FIA. That buzz counts for something, but is vague, imprecise and often contradictory. However, it’s also supported by the success of the Barcelona test, which Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains boss Hywel Thomas characterises as “we weren’t running, but we managed to walk” when it comes to its impressive reliability but unexplored performance.

George Russell, Mercedes, during Bahrain F1 test

Has Mercedes taken advantage of a loophole in the new regs? Team principal Toto Wolff, below, faced a barrage of questions in Bahrain

Grand Prix Photo

Secondly, it’s now well-known that Mercedes has, along with Red Bull, hit upon a design trick that allows the V6 engine to run at a higher compression ratio than intended by the regulations. The regulations do not allow a geometric compression ratio higher than 16:1, but crucially this is measured “at ambient temperature”. Both Mercedes and Red Bull Powertrains have hit on a way to exceed that and get closer to the 18:1 of the old rules when the engine is at operating temperature. That should mean a power and efficiency gain.

This has proved controversial, and discussions are ongoing between the manufacturers and the FIA about ways to create a means to test this at temperature. However, provided the design is within the letter of the law, and apparently it is, there’s every chance this won’t be fully curbed until 2027. There’s still the potential for a formal protest in Australia, but most likely Mercedes has a baked-in advantage for the year ahead. Wolff has railed against rival teams lobbying against the design, insisting, “it’s legal and it’s what the regulations say, but if someone wants to entertain themselves by distraction then everybody’s free to do this”.

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Has Mercedes taken advantage of a loophole in the new regs? Team principal Toto Wolff, below, faced a barrage of questions in Bahrain

Xavier Bonilla/Antonin Vincent/DPPI

Thirdly, Mercedes is a works team and that confers advantages when it comes to the understanding and integration of the power unit with the car. Although that hasn’t been enough for it to be ahead of McLaren in recent times, the benefits are magnified at the start of a new rules cycle. It also has three customer teams, which means mileage and data – and therefore understanding – will accumulate rapidly. And finally, while Mercedes HPP lost swathes of personnel to Red Bull’s in-house operation, it remains a formidable facility that has everything it needs to produce a market-leading engine.

Ranged against that, there’s the threat posed by Mercedes-engined McLaren and the fact that the spread of power unit performance is set to be narrower than it was in 2014. The key differentiators will be the overall power of the engine, the performance of the V6, the efficiency (and cooling characteristics) of the battery and integration of the systems to maximise energy management. Mercedes has also had to design and develop this power unit under a cost cap, set at a baseline of $95m for each of 2023, ’24 and ’25, which rises to $130m this year, preventing it from stealing a march with brute-force spending.

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In 2014, the hybrid era began, with Mercedes winning 16 of 19 races;  Lewis Hamilton took the title

Grand Prix Photo

The same can be said on the chassis side. When Mercedes was in its pomp, it was one of a small cadre of teams that had a high ceiling on spending. That’s now changed thanks to a combination of the more equitable split of ‘prize money’ across the teams, F1’s explosive growth and the imposition of a cost cap in ’21 covering the design, development and operation of the cars. Mercedes has yet to prove it can lead the way on a playing field that’s not tilted in favour of it financially.


The chassis is expected to play second fiddle to the power unit as far as a differentiator is concerned, at least before these new packages mature. That doesn’t mean it’s irrelevant, though. Mercedes has probably expended as much, if not more, effort than its leading rivals in attempting to troubleshoot the tools and processes used to design the car as it worked through its problems in the ground-effect era. While these 2026 machines are new, requiring the redesign of countless parts, the science and knowledge driving the process is the same that yielded the previous generation of Mercedes cars. That confers the potential advantage of forcing rigorous introspection and the learning of lessons that other teams may not have bumped up against, which is a pleasing thought for Mercedes.

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Unlike other teams, Mercedes has just one moveable flap on the front wing, not two

Grand Prix Photo

However, it would be absurd to argue that past failure inevitably leads to future success and the question of whether Mercedes has learned its lessons remains to be answered. That hit home in the 2025 season finale where Mercedes was surprised by the poor slow-corner rotation in the race that, according to Wolff, “shows that these cars are still not very clear to us”. What’s certainly the case is that this is a team happy to see the back of the old regulations, which technical director James Allison was a stern critic of, given his dislike of the necessity for low-slung, ultra-stiff designs. Perhaps the most encouraging comment was made by Russell, who was in the unfamiliar position of hitting the track in a car that was working exactly as the Mercedes simulation tools predicted for the first time since 2021.

“We left Barcelona with [a] positive feeling because the car reacted as we anticipated,” says Russell. “The numbers we’re seeing from the aero on the car match what we see back on the simulator. How the car is handling is matching how it feels on

“The numbers we’re seeing on the car match what we see on the simulator”

the simulator. This is something we’ve not experienced since 2021, as a team.”

While question marks hang over its technical capabilities, Russell is arguably the most dependable component of the Mercedes package. He’s ready to fight for the world championship, and he knows it. He cites Max Verstappen as the driver he wants to measure himself against and, in doing so, tacitly reveals he believes he has the rest covered. He’s laid down markers in battle with Verstappen, on and off track, and heads into 2026 off the back of his best season. He was arguably the most consistent driver of ’25, certainly the one who made the least significant errors. He has also stamped his authority on the team following the departure of Lewis Hamilton, showing repeatedly he’s not afraid to be a loud and, when necessary, critical voice within the team. He also hints that in the first half of the ground-effect era in particular, when Allison was in an overarching chief technical officer role before returning to the trenches as a more day-to-day performance-focused technical director, that the team oversimplified its challenges.

“I’m a rational and objective person and this is a sport where emotions get high,” says Russell. “And that’s absolutely fine, but when you’re in the engineer’s office or design office talking about updates and the direction we need to take, it’s important to have a clear head, to not overreact and to try and put a bit more of an objective reason why a certain weekend may have been a failure or may not have been a failure because there is never one reason that makes a weekend great or bad. But there are always theories flying around. We’re pointing at a certain aspect, saying that is the reason why we have failed, and if you action a plan based on that theory, it can take you in the wrong direction. Also with James Allison returning, as a team we are a bit more level-headed.”

Russell still has to prove he can cut it in a title fight. Even he must know that he might come up short against Verstappen. But while he’s cut back on the errors that blighted some of his time at Mercedes, albeit ones that arose partly through a conscious decision to push the limits, there’s no doubt he can at least be a regular race winner.

“Even Russell must know that he might come up short against Max”

Alongside him, Kimi Antonelli is the Mercedes wildcard. Promoted to F1 after just one season as its answer to Max Verstappen, in the sense of a young driver with prodigious potential thrown in at the deep end, he failed to deliver on sky-high expectations. On a near-vertical learning curve, Antonelli’s rookie season was a curate’s egg. He rarely showed the eye-watering pace Mercedes is confident he’s capable of, with an adjusted average almost a quarter-of-a-second off Russell. That’s not to say he was slow, and he even outperformed his team-mate emphatically late in the year at Interlagos before holding off the charging Verstappen to take second, but he impressed more in other areas.

George Russell would later set the pace at Sakhir, followed by team-mate Kimi Antonelli

This will be Russell’s fifth full-time season at Mercedes. Now 28,  he has the experience – and with the W17,  he may have the car…

Xavier Bonilla/DPPI

Probably his standout quality was his ability to absorb lessons. “When he learns things, they become embedded,” said Shovlin at the end of the year. “He’s not making the same mistakes time and time again.” By a curious quirk, he flipped the script by producing his season-defining displays at circuits he was less familiar with rather than on familiar ground in Europe. So extreme was this trend that all 11 of his 12 top-six finishes in grands prix came outside of Europe, the only exception being his fourth place on the streets of Baku.

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There were signs he was overstretched at times in European races, leading to Mercedes cutting back Antonelli’s promotional activities around them, while there was also an suspicion that his own higher expectations might have led to him struggling. The most significant factor was the rear-axle upgrade introduced at the first European race at Imola that created rear instability that hurt both drivers, but Antonelli in particular given he’s more attacking stylistically. By Antonelli’s own reckoning, the period when Mercedes was running this before ditching it for good “cost a good two, three months of progress”.

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This will be Russell’s fifth full-time season at Mercedes. Now 28,  he has the experience – and with the W17,  he may have the car…

Xavier Bonilla/DPPI

If Mercedes is a title threat this year, it will demand Antonelli be at least a strong wingman for Russell. But his ceiling is higher than that, and there’s a chance his solid but unspectacular rookie campaign will be followed up by a remarkable second season.

Mercedes lacks for nothing required to win in F1, but that was also the case over the past four years. The biggest rules overhaul in F1 history presents it with the means to bring back the glory days, but it must also prove it has the know-how and understanding needed to do so. The start is promising, but there’s still a long way to go.

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A win in sultry Singapore for Russell in October 2025 was a career fifth. More will surely follow for him this season…

Mercedes-Benz AG

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Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

There’s an exciting level of uncertainty about any new Formula 1 season but it’s particularly acute in the eve of a regulation change, especially one so all-encompassing as the new ‘50/50’ electric/combustion set.

It’s not actually 50/50; that was just a loose regulatory aim. The electrical power is capped at 350kW (around 470bhp) whereas the internal combustion turbo V6s are free to be developed to whatever anyone can get out of them within the regulations. A current ballpark figure for the ICE (internal combustion engine) seems to be around 530bhp, making the split more like 47%/53% electric to ICE.

The significance of one half of the power source being capped and the other not is competitively profound. That’s because the more potent the combustion engine, the more efficiently the batteries can be recharged – and the longer therefore the electrical power can be deployed while still keeping the batteries in a balanced state (i.e. using no more energy over the lap than that which is being fed into them).

So not only will any ICE power advantage itself help get the car down the road faster, but it will be able to feed the battery well enough that the electrical power can be deployed for longer. It’s a little more complex than that, because it’s not just the peak power of the ICE which determines how quickly the batteries are recharged but also the engine’s power delivery and how that integrates with any particular track layout. But essentially, any ICE power advantage does compound in the whole power unit equation.

Furthermore, because we now have active aerodynamics allowing the wings to be flattened down the straights, the authority of power over laptime has increased considerably. You are no longer straining against the squaring resistance of drag, which is no longer trying to saturate any power advantage as you get into the 150mph-plus range. Extra power now translates much more obviously into straightline speeds, which in turn are way more influential on lap times, with corner speeds no longer the dominant factor.

Given that broad backdrop, the implications of Max Verstappen’s Red Bull performance on the first day of Bahrain testing were potentially devastating. For one thing, his terminal speed on the pitstraight, at 214mph was 7.5mph faster than any non-Red Bull Powertrains car (second-fastest to Verstappen down that straight was the VCARB of Arvid Lindblad, also with a Red Bull Powertrains PU). But that’s only over a single lap and may have just been down to the different choices made by each team in how to spread the energy deployment over the lap. Certainly, the McLaren and the Ferrari showed themselves capable of lapping at least as fast over one lap. What was far more concerning for the others was Verstappen’s sequence of 10 consecutive laps, at around the same time of day as George Russell was doing a similar run in his Mercedes.

“Look at Red Bull’s energy deployment – more on the straights than everyone else”

On the issue, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff commented: “Look at their energy deployment. They are able to deploy far more energy on the straights than everybody else. On a single lap we’ve seen it before, but now we’ve seen how it looks on 10 consecutive laps with the same kind of straightline deployment [throughout]. They are taking 1sec out of us on the straights. I would say that today, the first official day of testing, they are the benchmark.”


Over a single lap of qualifying you would typically run the battery into debt, using up its full store of energy and converting it into that ultimate lap. So in that situation, any shortfall of how effectively you are harvesting energy is not critical. But as soon as you do a sequence of consecutive push laps, then the true picture emerges. And it was a picture incredibly positive for Red Bull and in particular Red Bull Powertrains. This is a start-up power unit manufacturing facility which didn’t exist five years ago making its first F1 engine and going up against Mercedes, Ferrari, Honda, etc. Not only did it look very fast, but it also ran the highest number of laps on that first test day. It represents a stunning achievement.

George Russell would later set the pace at Sakhir, followed by team-mate Kimi Antonelli

George Russell would later set the pace at Sakhir, followed by team-mate Kimi Antonelli

Xavier Bonilla/DPPI

But here come the provisos, and there are a couple of big ones. We may be about to witness a season where the differences in power unit competitiveness swing wildly according to track layouts. Depending, for example, on the chosen size of turbo, you may have an ICE which is extremely efficient at feeding the battery off-throttle but very greedy in consuming its charge out of slow corners. Or the reverse. Or you may have a PU which in its energy usage loves flowing corners but hates stop-start. Or the reverse. So is Bahrain’s Sakhir track, with its succession of heavy braking/heavy acceleration zones, just very well suited to the Red Bull Powetrains unit? Will the advantage be with a different engine at a different layout?

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Secondly, as Toto Wolff made those comments about the Red Bull, we were in the midst of ‘compression ratio-gate’, with a meeting scheduled between the teams, the FIA and FOM to discuss the legality of the Mercedes power unit. If the Mercedes PU was achieving a compression ratio in excess of that when measured statically, there was the potential for a gain of around 12bhp. Which as well as the circa 0.3sec of qualifying lap time that was worth, would also – as discussed above – be extra-valuable in more quickly charging the battery and allowing longer deployment.

So if you were cynical, you might think the last thing Mercedes needed to do in pre-season testing was give any indication it had an ICE power advantage. And the PU might be set-up very conservatively so as not to give that impression.

All (or some) will be revealed soon.


Paddock Talk

“It feels a bit like Formula E on steroids”

Max Verstappen’s brutal verdict on the new 50% electric/50% combustion Formula 1 cars

“A very, very strong Verstappen, so we have to get our act together, all of us”

Toto Wolff deflects from speculation concerning the Mercedes engine with wholehearted praises for the rival team

“Eventually we will have the best car. It’s a matter of time”

Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso has no doubt that Adrian Newey will produce the goods

“If it doesn’t work this year, I don’t know if it is going to work again”

Jenson Button, who called time on professional racing last year aged 46, says it’s now or never for Lewis Hamilton, his ex-McLaren teammate

“If I don’t achieve anything again, I have something that I’m proud of”

Lando Norris on defending last year’s world title

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Daytona 24 Hours: Why Le Mans regulars should make the trip

February 14, 2026
Silverstone, Northants

This year the Vintage Sports-Car Club celebrated the 70th running of its Pomeroy Trophy. Taking place since 1952 (a few years were missed), it’s a unique event where pre-war cars take on more modern machines through a series of tests to find out which is the best all-rounder – culminating with 40 minutes of track time on the Silverstone circuit. This photograph is indicative of the wildly differing cars you’ll see competing in the ‘Pom’, showing Brett Dillon’s 1959 Austin-Healey Sebring Sprite up against Mike Thorne’s 1954 Austin A30 and Thomas Townsend’s 1953 Bentley Mk VI Special. This year’s results? Alas, as this issue was going to press the provisionals hadn’t been approved by the handicappers.