Coulthard diz que GP de Miami dificilmente mostrará o efeito total das mudanças nas regras da F1

O ex-piloto de Fórmula 1 David Coulthard alertou que o próximo Grande Prêmio de Miami pode não demonstrar o verdadeiro impacto das recentes mudanças no regulamento. Ele argumentou que o traçado da pista limita os efeitos visíveis das alterações introduzidas após preocupações com a segurança. Coulthard espera que as modificações melhorem a qualidade das corridas ao longo de múltiplos eventos.

David Coulthard, ex-piloto da Red Bull, compartilhou suas visões sobre as novas mudanças no regulamento da F1 durante uma aparição no podcast Up To Speed. As alterações decorrem de reuniões entre a FIA, a Formula One Management e as equipes durante o intervalo de cinco semanas entre os Grandes Prêmios do Japão e de Miami. Essas discussões abordaram a gestão de energia e questões de segurança levantadas pelo acidente de Oliver Bearman em Suzuka, levando a refinamentos acordados. Coulthard observou que o circuito de Miami, que apresenta muitas curvas de baixa e média velocidade, carece das seções de alta velocidade necessárias para destacar os ajustes. 'Em Miami, não veremos necessariamente os resultados dessas mudanças por causa da natureza da pista lá', disse ele. Ele sugeriu que os fãs deveriam observar algumas corridas para avaliar o impacto adequadamente. Apesar disso, Coulthard permanece positivo, prevendo menos picos de potência artificiais disfarçados de ultrapassagens. Em vez disso, ele antecipa mais habilidade genuína do piloto no posicionamento para o vácuo, de forma semelhante ao uso do DRS no passado. 'Será mais sobre o piloto posicionar o carro', explicou. O Grande Prêmio de Miami está agendado para os dias 1 a 3 de maio no Hard Rock Stadium.

Artigos relacionados

FIA and F1 teams agree on 2026 rule changes for safety at Miami Grand Prix.
Imagem gerada por IA

FIA tweaks 2026 F1 rules to boost safety and qualifying ahead of Miami

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

The FIA and Formula 1 teams have agreed on changes to the 2026 regulations, set to debut at the Miami Grand Prix this weekend. The tweaks aim to reduce closing speeds between cars and eliminate unintended overtakes, while improving qualifying performance. Drivers and officials expect these adjustments to enhance safety without compromising racing.

The FIA has announced targeted adjustments to the 2026 Formula 1 regulations ahead of the Miami Grand Prix, addressing concerns from the first three races. Changes focus on qualifying performance, safety issues like speed differentials, and start procedures. Officials reduced the per-lap energy harvesting limit from 8MJ to 7MJ and increased super clipping from 250kW to 350kW.

Reportado por IA

The FIA, Formula 1, teams and power unit manufacturers unanimously agreed on adjustments to the 2026 regulations following a meeting on Monday. The changes focus on energy management to make qualifying more competitive and enhance safety. Most updates will take effect from the Miami Grand Prix onward.

Formula 1 drivers have criticized aspects of the 2026 regulations following the Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka, particularly energy management affecting qualifying and on-track battles. Alpine's Pierre Gasly called for tweaks but pushed back against excessive negativity, while McLaren's Lando Norris and Williams' Alexander Albon detailed specific issues. A review meeting is planned next week ahead of the Miami race.

Reportado por IA

Racing Bulls team principal Alan Permane has suggested Formula 1 implement energy management changes for the 2026 regulations in continuous phases rather than just two stages. He cited the challenges of upcoming sprint weekends in Miami and Montreal as reasons for a gradual approach. Changes could begin as early as the Miami Grand Prix in early May.

Max Verstappen has shared proposals with the FIA to address concerns over the new 2026 Formula 1 regulations following the Australian Grand Prix. Drivers have criticized the 'yo-yo racing' caused by energy management, which led to artificial overtakes and safety issues at the start. Verstappen hopes for changes to make racing more natural, while confirming he does not plan to leave the sport.

Reportado por IA

McLaren driver Oscar Piastri explained that new Formula 1 rules require drivers to analyze non-obvious data points to optimize qualifying laps. He highlighted the challenges of managing throttle, battery, and power unit behavior differently than before. Piastri hopes upcoming tweaks for the Miami Grand Prix will ease these issues.

segunda-feira, 27 de abril de 2026, 10:42h

Pundits hail McLaren Miami upgrade as potential F1 season reset

domingo, 26 de abril de 2026, 08:00h

McLaren says F1 discussing 2026 power unit hardware changes

domingo, 26 de abril de 2026, 00:24h

FIA agrees on F1 rule changes ahead of Miami Grand Prix

domingo, 19 de abril de 2026, 09:11h

David Croft urges FIA tweaks to 2026 F1 rules before Silverstone

quarta-feira, 15 de abril de 2026, 10:34h

F1 CEO confident in 2026 rules tweaks amid early season concerns

quarta-feira, 01 de abril de 2026, 23:48h

Team bosses anticipate new F1 phase at Miami Grand Prix

sábado, 28 de março de 2026, 22:01h

F1 drivers frustrated by qualifying quirks at Japanese GP

segunda-feira, 23 de março de 2026, 22:37h

Sainz renews call for F1 2026 regs rethink after Shanghai GP

segunda-feira, 16 de março de 2026, 16:08h

No F1 rule changes ahead of Japanese Grand Prix

quarta-feira, 04 de março de 2026, 08:13h

Oliver Bearman warns Australian GP could test new F1 regulations severely

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar