- 1 The top class is under threat: what if Formula 1 is no longer the fastest discipline on the planet?
- 2 IndyCar and the outright speed crown
- 3 The chronic bulk of the hybrid single-seaters
- 4 Japan’s Super Formula: agility that throws the numbers out of the window
- 5 Formula 1 – The 2026 rule revolution: slowing down by design
- 6 Engineering sacrificed at the altar of entertainment
The top class is under threat: what if Formula 1 is no longer the fastest discipline on the planet? 
Historically, Formula 1 has sat at the summit of motorsport. The assumption looked unshakable: no other four-wheeled machine could lap a circuit quicker. And yet that absolute truth is starting to wobble. Changes in regulations, an obsession with safety and the rise of rival series are changing the equation. The untouchable status of the top class is now being seriously questioned. A technical look at a coming demotion.
IndyCar and the outright speed crown 
If speed is nothing more than the number on the radar gun, Formula 1 has already lost. On a conventional track, the European single-seaters shine thanks to their braking. But on an oval, IndyCar sets the rules. In qualifying for the Indianapolis 500, drivers flirt with average speeds of 380 km/h. The American aero setups, stripped of the heavy downforce needed to punch through the air, make Formula 1 top speeds look modest, often capped around 350 km/h by the drag created by their huge wings.
The chronic bulk of the hybrid single-seaters
Physics doesn’t care about marketing. The more mass you add, the slower the car is through a corner. Since the hybrid era began, Formula 1 has put on a huge amount of weight. Oversized batteries, complex electric motors, heavily fortified safety structures such as the Halo and reinforced chassis: modern F1 cars are nudging 800 kilos on the scales. That’s a critical mass that creates monstrous inertia in slow corners. The sharpness of the 2000s cars, which weighed barely 600 kilos, is now just a distant memory.
Japan’s Super Formula: agility that throws the numbers out of the window 
Japan is home to a championship that most fans barely know, but engineers respect: Super Formula. These Dallara-built single-seaters weigh about 100 kilos less than a current F1 car. Their turbocharged four-cylinder engine is less powerful, but the lighter package, combined with extreme use of ground effect, produces some remarkable numbers. In high-speed corners, such as Suzuka’s famous Esses in sector one, telemetry regularly shows Super Formula matching, and sometimes beating, the cornering speeds of the top class.
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Formula 1 – The 2026 rule revolution: slowing down by design
The technical rules that came in this season have created a mathematical break. The reduction in car size and the introduction of active aerodynamics, with movable wings, were meant to cut drag on the straights. The immediate cost: overall downforce has been slashed. The cars stick to the track far less. The Pirelli tyres are slipping more. The lap times show it. F1 is accepting that it will be several seconds slower a lap in order to meet its new energy-consumption limits.
The idea of speed in motorsport is going through a deep philosophical shift. This deliberate decision to slow the cars down is hiding a much bigger media calculation.
Engineering sacrificed at the altar of entertainment 
The FIA and Liberty Media have made their call. The aim is no longer to break lap records. The ultra-fast F1 cars of previous generations created such a brutal wake of dirty air that it became physically impossible for a driver to follow another closely. The sport was slowly strangling itself with the weight of its own aerodynamic efficiency. Formula 1 now accepts that it will be fundamentally slower. Raw lap time has been sacrificed in favour of better wheel-to-wheel racing. The top class has realised that speed alone does not sell the show; overtakes are what drive the TV money.
Photo by Hasan Bratic / dpa Picture-Alliance via AFP


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