Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Revised gravel tyre set for WRC debut in Greece

WRC
Revised gravel tyre set for WRC debut in Greece

McLaren: Ferrari has best F1 chassis after Barcelona upgrades

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
McLaren: Ferrari has best F1 chassis after Barcelona upgrades

How Toyota pulled off its most significant Le Mans victory

Feature
WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
How Toyota pulled off its most significant Le Mans victory

"Don't forget who you are" How Hamilton beat his demons to win with Ferrari

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
"Don't forget who you are" How Hamilton beat his demons to win with Ferrari

The crazy stats from Hamilton's Barcelona GP triumph and his first win for Ferrari

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
The crazy stats from Hamilton's Barcelona GP triumph and his first win for Ferrari

How the #8 Toyota lost the 2026 Le Mans 24 Hours

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
How the #8 Toyota lost the 2026 Le Mans 24 Hours

Mercedes seeks right of review over Russell’s Monaco GP penalty

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Mercedes seeks right of review over Russell’s Monaco GP penalty

Barcelona Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Barcelona Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

Autosport Explains video: The engineering challenges of F1's new power unit rules

A huge shift in F1's regulations this season has been highlighted by new power units. So what has actually changed?

Autosport Explains

Our experts decode the most important stories in motorsport.

F1's 2026 power unit regulations represent the sport's biggest engineering shake-up in years — and the effects are already showing on track. In this edition of Autosport Explains, Jake Boxall-Legge sat down with Powertrains Engineer Estanis Buigues Mahiques to break down what's actually changed: a weaker combustion engine, tripled electric output, the death of the MGU-H, and a new energy management philosophy that's closer to Formula E than anything F1 fans have seen before.

Read Also:

From turbo lag at race starts to cars dropping into first gear through slow corners, Estanis explains the engineering realities behind the quirks teams are scrambling to solve as the season gets underway.

Previous article Exclusive: Ahead of Red Bull – is Haas the unsung hero of the early F1 races?
Next article Why Hamilton is 'back to his best' in F1 2026

Top Comments