F1 News, Reports and Race Results

FIA president calls for lighter cars in F1: ‘Everybody wants it’

X (Twitter)X (Twitter)
FacebookFacebook
WhatsappWhatsapp

FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem is advocating for lighter cars in Formula 1, claiming that leaner machines would not only be safer but also more fuel efficient.

The introduction last year of Formula 1's new technical regulations spawned a generation of ground effect cars, but the cganges were also accompanied by an increase of the minimum weight, which was set at 798kg or a whopping 46kg higher than at the end of 2021.

Many teams, including champions Red Bull, struggled to produce designs that hit the minimum weight, a constraint due to heavier standard parts, the introduction of F1's 18-inch wheels and new safety structures.

George Russell (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W14. 28.05.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 7, Monaco Grand Prix, Monte Carlo, Monaco, Race Day. - www.xpbimages.com, EMail: requests@xpbimages.com © Copyright: Batchelor / XPB ImagesGeorge Russell (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W14. 28.05.2023. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 7, Monaco Grand Prix, Monte Carlo, Monaco, Race Day. - www.xpbimages.com, EMail: requests@xpbimages.com © Copyright: Batchelor / XPB Images

The increase was just another step in a trend that has been ongoing in Formula 1 since the end of the sport's refueling era in 2009.

Earlier this year, Mercedes’ George Russell admitted that the bias towards heavier cars in Formula 1 was leading to safety concerns as an impact "is like crashing with a bus compared to a Smart Car".

"We keep making these cars safer and safer, but obviously the heavier you make them when you have an impact it’s like crashing with a bus compared to a Smart Car,” said the Briton.

"You’re going to have a greater impact if you’re going the same speed with a car that weights 800-odd-kgs or over 900kgs at the start of a race, compared to one 15 years ago when they were at 650kg."

Russell’s words weren’t lost on Ben Sulayem who agrees with the Mercedes driver’s opinion. Furthermore, the FIA president believes that the request for lighter cars from 2026 when F1 updates its regulations is widespread among Grand Prix racing’s competitors.

“One thing I would like to see is very clear: we need a lighter car,” Ben Sulayem told Motorsport.com. “I believe this is better.

“I come from motorsport, where lighter cars are safer and they won’t use the same amount of fuel. It will be hard to achieve, but everybody wants it.

“So I am pushing because I come from rallying, where nothing is worse than having a heavy car.”

Formula 1 chief executive Stefano Domenicali, agreed that the current generation of cars’ weight is a topic that will find its way onto the sport’s agenda.

“One of the points that has always been a debate has been the weight,” said the Italian.

“As you know, with the hybrid engines, with the batteries, the weight is getting higher and that is something that is not really in the nature of F1. So, it’s a topic for discussion for the future.”

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Horner on Lawson demotion: ‘You’ve got to be cruel to be kind’

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner is standing by his team’s decision to demote Liam…

6 hours ago

Haas rolling the dice with risky VF-25 floor update in Suzuka

Haas heads into the Japanese Grand Prix weekend with a risky move after fast-tracking a…

7 hours ago

Japanese GP: Thursday's build-up in pictures

The Japanese Grand Prix roars into action this weekend at one of its most iconic…

8 hours ago

Norris: McLaren ‘unbeatable’is just rivals ‘talking crap’

Lando Norris, the current F1 championship leader, has hit out at suggestions that McLaren holds…

9 hours ago

A historic first, and last, for Andretti at Long Beach

Mario Andretti won the 1977 US Grand Prix West at Long Beach on this day…

10 hours ago

Hamilton calls doubts over faith in Ferrari ‘complete rubbish’

Lewis Hamilton has forcefully dismissed suggestions that he’s losing faith in Ferrari, calling such claims…

11 hours ago