quovadis
Honorary Master
Aston 11th?^
1 Merc
2 Ferrari
3 Macca
4 Red Bull
5 Haas
6 Alpine
7 Racing Bull
8 Audi
9 Williams
10 Cadillac
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Aston 11th?^
1 Merc
2 Ferrari
3 Macca
4 Red Bull
5 Haas
6 Alpine
7 Racing Bull
8 Audi
9 Williams
10 Cadillac
Persona non grataIf you want to include them lol.
When Aston Martin's new Formula 1 car first appeared in testing at the end of January, it drew admiring glances up and down the pit lane.
In its all-black temporary colour, the car not only looked menacing, but also noticeably different from all its rivals. It included the sort of innovations that have become famous from design legend Adrian Newey, installed as managing technical partner at Aston Martin since March last year.
But reality bit hard as soon as the car started to run. It was already late, and it managed just four laps on its first day in Barcelona before conking out at the entrance to the pit lane.
Aston Martin's fortunes have barely improved since.
It would be cheaper to install pressure switches around each corner and connect these sensors to Home AssistantHow the FIA will use AI to police one of F1's most controversial subjects in 2026: https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/...most-controversial-subjects-in-2026/10800288/
"Starting this season, a new system called ECAT will monitor track limits at every corner via an advanced platform that uses AI to interpret each car's behaviour on track
The core concept is named "Every Car All Turns (ECAT)", the idea being that the system interprets a car's behaviour by measuring it against a reference model. By cross‑referencing this information with the micro‑sector timing data, RaceWatch can understand what happened at that specific point on the track and flag the episode for a possible review.
"If a car deviates from the ideal line, it will potentially cover more distance," says Bentley. "That allows us to see a difference in the sector time and go back to understand where it went off track or what happened. The idea is to use all the data, enrich it with the available video and trace these elements, so that the system tells us what is happening instead of having to look for it manually."
"The goal is to take the system to the next level. It works across the entire track, all the time, so it can automatically understand what's going on. This is the evolution of what we're trying to do go from a manual process to semi-automatic process, with still a manual element to it because you have to evaluate strikes and black-and-white flags".
The FIA actively works with circuits to improve coverage and to identify the best camera placement, but this isn't always possible and varies from track to track. However, with this new system, cameras, while still important, are no longer the only foundation of the analysis.
The system can now detect a potential track‑limit infringement purely from positioning data: if it shows an abnormal deviation, if the car enters a virtual zone drawn on the track, or if its trajectory strays too far from the ideal racing line, RaceWatch can generate an alert.
"It's allowed us to move up a level, manage all the cameras in one place, distribute the process in the computer vision and process other elements that we've had available in one place," says Bentley. "So basically, we can automatically flag when a car goes off track because the positioning data changes, or use geofencing: we can draw chicanes and virtual zones on the track that trigger an alert if a car enters them. All of this will already be operational this year, we've been working on it throughout 2025." ..."

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I can only hope that F1 loses at least one fan.
I get the feeling that behind closed doors, he's the kind of guy who's very familiar with what semen smells like...
Ok, maybe 2 or 5 more.Ben Sulayem?
Still a virgin?I get the feeling that behind closed doors, he's the kind of guy who's very familiar with what semen smells like...
Impossible to have foreseen potential issues with Honda F1 engines?!?! Seriously?Very sad given Lawrence has invested so much and done all the right things, except this one that is a biggie and unfortunately impossible to have forseen.
Aren't all those previous Honda engineers now Ford (RBPT) engineers?What planet are you on? Ford was a bigger gamble by a margin. Honda have been in F1 for some time now nd have won 4 world championships in the past 5 years. Pull the other one mate.
www.the-race.com
Pirelli has cancelled its two-day Formula 1 tyre test amid the escalating international situation between the United States, Israel and Iran, with further potential disruption to the start of F1’s 2026 season to come.
Pirelli had an unusual wet tyre test planned for February 28-March 1 in Bahrain (using sprinklers) before F1’s Melbourne opener with Mercedes and McLaren, but that’s now been cancelled for security reasons. On Saturday, Iranian forces said they had struck a US naval base in Bahrain.
“The two days of development tests for wet-weather compounds, scheduled for today and tomorrow at the Bahrain International Circuit, have been cancelled for security reasons following the evolving international situation,” a spokesperson from Pirelli told The Race.
Lots of people will be travelling through Abu Dhabi and Qatar, including myself early next week, where the airspace is currently closed.
There’s enough time for this to be resolved or for alternative arrangements to be made, for people to get to Australia without it being a problem. But if it continues, and people start getting into early next week and not being able to travel, that is when they will struggle to get there for when they need to be.
Beyond that, there’s the prospect of races in that region that you cannot currently travel to and are being subject to military strikes. It’s impossible to know how long that will continue.
F1 is due to race in Bahrain and then Saudi Arabia in April, and both places have closed airspace right now. It will at least be on the radar at a very high level that this needs to be monitored.