F1 News: Wolff now agrees with Horner, 2026 F1 cars will be ‘turds’
Toto Wolff criticized Red Bull’s Christian Horner when he came out and said the 2026 F1 cars would be Frankenstein cars and much too slow because using almost 50% electrical power was impractical.
Red Bull simulations showed the cars would be really slow. Now Toto Wolff has had to eat his words as his Mercedes engineers now tell him the 2026 cars will be up to 10 seconds per lap slower, i.e. ‘slow turds,’ all because they are trying to placate the greenies and their fake climate change narrative.
Related Video: F1 News: Are 2026 F1 cars about to get really slow? – Watch
(GMM) Formula 1 risks becoming “much too slow” with the debut of the 2026 regulations as currently written, Toto Wolff admits.
Many are tipping Mercedes to once again ace the forthcoming rule changes, but even boss Wolff admits he is worried about the lap times currently emerging from simulations.
“What we need are cars that have as little drag as possible on the straights, but still have enough downforce to be fast in the corners,” he told the Austrian broadcaster ORF.
Indeed, so extreme is the electrical component of the hybrid engine power for 2026 that the rule-makers are still tweaking the precise chassis regulations.
Wolff warned: “What we have now is much too slow. Sometimes we have lap times that are ten seconds slower than today.
“But Formula 1 has always been the cradle of innovation and I am convinced that the cars will become fast again through what the engineers will come up with.”
The Austrian thinks that even if the lap times do take a hit in 2026, many spectators wouldn’t mind or even notice.
“The cars are still much faster than anything else that exists,” said Wolff. “You also have to realize that there is little difference for the television viewer.
“The IndyCars look fast too, but they are 20 seconds slower than the Formula 1 cars.”
Nonetheless, Wolff joins those who think F1 is going down an extreme road by requiring that a full 50 percent of the propulsion in 2026 will be with electrical energy.
“Perhaps there could have been a little less battery and a little more combustion engine,” he said. “After all, we will already be running entirely on sustainable fuel. That fuel is 100 percent sustainable, so we could certainly have made some adjustments.
“But anyway, it’s too late for that now.”
Related Article: F1 Editorial: The FIA should delay 2026 F1 Technical Regulations