Chargement ...

FIA, F1 chiefs admit cars are too heavy

"We need a lighter car"

Chargement ...

FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem and F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali admit that Formula 1 cars are too heavy.

The minimum car-plus-driver weight has skyrocketed with the move to hybrid power units from around 600kg in 2010 to almost 800kg in 2023.

"Also the bigger wheels, they’re quite a bit heavier as well," world champion Max Verstappen said. "So that for me goes in the wrong direction.

"When you jump back in an old car, you definitely feel the difference in how agile an old car was. Before 2010 they were even lighter, right?

"But I don’t know what we can do about turning it around," he added.

A good step in the right direction, however, is that the FIA is at least acknowledging that it is a problem.

"We need a lighter car," Ben Sulayem told motorsport-total.com. "It will be difficult to achieve, but everyone wants it.

"I come from motorsport where lighter cars are safer and don’t use as much fuel. So I’m applying pressure because I come from rallying, where there’s nothing worse than having a heavy car," the FIA president added.

The heavy electric elements of the power unit regulations are only ramping up for 2026 and beyond, but Domenicali agrees with the FIA chief that it’s a good opportunity to try to lower the minimum weight.

"One of the points that is discussed again and again is the weight," said the Italian, who admits that heavy cars are "not really in the nature of Formula 1".

Chargement ...

«Rumours of Perez axe ’nonsense’ - Marko

Pirelli aims to beat Bridgestone to 2025 F1 deal»

F1 - FOM - Liberty Media


>More British pundits face axe over bias accusations

>Europe steps away from Andretti-Cadillac saga

>Chaos breaking out inside F1, FIA organisations

>Maffei out, question-mark over Domenicali’s F1 future

>F1 confirm plans for first ever season launch event

More on F1 - FOM - Liberty Media

FIA


>Drivers happy with new F1 race director

>FIA bans Ferrari, Mercedes ’skid block’ protections

>’No answer’ yet to F1 drivers’ letter to FIA - Leclerc

>Chaos breaking out inside F1, FIA organisations

>T-tray, water-in-tyres investigations ’closed’ - FIA

More on FIA

Formula 1 news


>Boss plays down rumours about Dutch GP future

>School rather than F1 return for Sebastian Vettel

>Newey can help fix Aston Martin ’mistakes’ in 2025

>Red Bull must make better car for 2025 - Verstappen snr

>GM-owned Cadillac said Andretti will be a team director

More Formula 1news