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F1 teams to discuss engine equalisation move Formula 1 teams will hold talks about a potential return of engine equalisation amid concerns about a performance disparity between current manufacturers, Motorsport.com can reveal.

F1 teams to discuss engine equalisation move
Formula 1 teams will hold talks about a potential return of engine equalisation amid concerns about a performance disparity between current manufacturers, Motorsport.com can reveal.

High-level sources have revealed that the topic of engine equalisation has been added to the agenda of next week’s meeting of the F1 Commission that is to take place at the Belgian Grand Prix.

It is understood that the issue has been tabled following analysis by the FIA about the performance of the current power units, fuelled by concerns from French manufacturer Alpine that its Renault engine is not on a par with rivals.

Sources suggest that analysis of the performance of the different power units points to the Renault being somewhere between 15-25Kw (20-33hp) down on other competitors.Neither

Renault nor the FIA have made any comment on the matter.

With the performance gap between teams being so small right now, such a power disparity is enough to make a potential difference to the hopes of the Alpine team.

And it is especially frustrating for Renault because it is unable to improve things as, under the engine freeze that is in place until 2025, there are strict limits on what can be changed on the power units.

The FIA technical regulations are explicit that modifications to the power units can be made from now on only “for the sole purposes of reliability, safety, cost saving, or minimal incidental changes.”

However, with the FIA feeling that there is evidence of performance differences having opened up, there are grounds for potential action to be taken to help level things up.

Engine equalisation has taken place in F1 before, with it being used back in the V8 era in 2007 to close up the field after some manufacturers had exploited reliability changes to increase their own performance, helping open up an advantage.

Ahead of the current F1 engine freeze that came into force in 2022, it was decided that there would be no framework within the regulations to allow for equalisation because it was felt that the performances were close enough already.

If it is agreed at the F1 Commission meeting that the issue of engine equalisation needs looking at, it is unclear exactly how it will be achieved because it is not a given that Renault will simply be allowed free reign to make improvements. READ MORE

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