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Are F1's technical changes for Miami enough to ease 2026 concerns?

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FIA confirms changes to 2026 F1 rules ahead of Miami GP

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Why 2026 F1 rule changes involve "a scalpel, not a baseball bat"

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Cars and stars from the 2026 Goodwood Members’ Meeting

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Cars and stars from the 2026 Goodwood Members’ Meeting

Sutton takes early BTCC lead after Donington Park opener

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BTCC
Donington Park (National Circuit)
Sutton takes early BTCC lead after Donington Park opener

Close encounters bookend glorious Goodwood’s 83rd Members’ Meeting

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Close encounters bookend glorious Goodwood’s 83rd Members’ Meeting

Why 'inevitably' struck again in IndyCar as Palou won at Long Beach

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IndyCar
Long Beach
Why 'inevitably' struck again in IndyCar as Palou won at Long Beach

Renault believes new F1 engine should offer 0.3s per lap gains

Renault believes it has found 0.3 seconds per lap with its all-new Formula 1 engine, and hopes to make a similar leap forward over the course of the season

The French manufacturer made good gains with its 2016 power unit, but has elected to introduce an all-new design for this season.

Speaking at the launch of the team's 2017 F1 contender, Renault managing director Cyril Abiteboul revealed that progress had been strong with the new design that will be run by the works team, Red Bull and Toro Rosso.

"What I know is that we started from scratch, which was quite brave because we had a good product last year that was quite decent, more than decent actually," he said, when asked by Autosport about performance gains.

"I think we were quite surprised in terms of reliability. But we made a decision to start from scratch again.

"Clearly in F1 if you don't attack you are dead.

"We saw that if we were serious about our ambition to catch up with, and if not overtake, the best in class which is Mercedes, we had to envisage a completely different philosophy, which is what we have done this year.

"So the first thing to get right is reliability. That is what will have to come first.

"In terms of performance gains, we are targeting 0.3 seconds in terms of how we finished the season and how we start the season - I am just talking about engine to engine.

"Nothing related to the rest of the car. And we hope to make more or less an equivalent step over the course of the season."

Renault is already scheduling a development step that will likely come on course for the start of the European season.

However, Abiteboul insists the priority has to be reliability, because if it struggles early in the campaign that could hinder its progress later on.

"We think that between 0.3 - 0.4 seconds is what we want to achieve over the course of the season with in-season development," he said.

"But all of that will only be possible if we have the reliability, because if we don't have the reliability then it really screws your engine introduction plan.

"And then what you were supposed to bring for engine number two or engine number three will not be available because you have to fix your reliability issue."

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