Charles Leclerc set the fastest time of testing with a 1:31.992, placing Ferrari at the head of the field. Behind them, Mercedes, McLaren, and Red Bull form a lead quartet separated by fractions of a second, with a gap of at least one full second to a tightly contested midfield. Despite Ferrari’s headline time, paddock consensus points to Mercedes as the pre-race favourite for Melbourne, having topped the mileage charts with 432 laps in the final test while deliberately avoiding qualifying-style runs.
“Ferrari showed us the car that can get pole position,” said Jarrod Partridge, Co-Founder of F1 Chronicle. “But Mercedes showed us the car that can win a race. Finishing 1.2 seconds off the pace while leading on mileage is not a weakness; that is strategy. They have performance in hand, and they know it.”
The defining technical narrative of the 2026 F1 rules is “clipping.” The 50:50 power split delivers explosive initial acceleration, but once the battery depletes, speed bleeds away before the braking zone. Drivers have responded with new tactics, including “lift and coast” and “super clipping,” where the MGU-K is run in reverse to force-charge the battery while the engine runs flat out.
“Energy management is now a primary performance lever, not a secondary one,” said Partridge. “This season, the race engineers and drivers who master battery deployment will be the ones winning championships.”
One of the most encouraging storylines of testing was the performance of Formula 1’s new entrants. Cadillac, the sport’s 11th team, exceeded expectations by running reliably throughout and finishing within striking distance of established midfield competitors. Audi, making their debut as a power unit manufacturer, posted a top speed of 341 km/h and showed strong race trim pace, signalling genuine long-term ambition.
“What Cadillac and Audi showed in Bahrain was genuinely encouraging,” said Partridge. “Cadillac earned real paddock respect by running cleanly and competing closely with teams that have been in the sport for years. Audi’s top speed numbers suggest there is serious performance to come. Both teams have arrived to compete, and the sport is better for it.”
The 2026 F1 season kicks off with the Australian Grand Prix takes place in Melbourne on the weekend of March 14-16.
Press Release Distributed by PRLog
Source: F1 Chronicle
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