23/06/2025 18:15
F1 team principals James Vowles, Fred Vasseur and Ayao Komatsu have
spoken about the difficulty of knowing when to turn full attention
to the 2026 F1 regulations. The championship's overhaul of the
technical rulebook will come into force next year, thus leaving
team's torn over how to allocate resources throughout the current
campaign. Naturally, that pivotal point varies across F1's ten
constructors and some, like Williams, have already switched focus
due to it being a "clean sheet of paper", in the words of Vowles.
"I think you'll find it's probably different team by team," the
Grove-based squad's team boss told media including RacingNews365 .
"For us, I've been very vocal about this. "We pulled the [2025] car
out the tunnel on January 2nd [when work on the new chassis was
allowed from] on purpose. We're here to make sure we have an
opportunity. Next year is basically a clean sheet of paper - you
can redraw everything. There's no carryover. "And for us as
Williams, that's a really good opportunity to make sure we're just
digging out some of the other elements that we need to put
foundations in for and get it right. But that's probably an
exception, not the rule. But for us, it's a good reset
opportunity." Vasseur and Komatsu Vasseur, on the other hand,
highlighted how many teams are still weighing up and evaluating
when to fully transition focus to next season. He pointed out how,
at this stage, Ferrari is making "perhaps ten times more
improvement" on the new car compared to 2025's SF-25. "I think
every single team has the same topic on the table now: to decide
when we have to switch completely to the next year's project," the
Frenchman said. "For sure, every single day in the wind tunnel on
the next year's project, we are making perhaps ten times more
improvement than on the current car. "And it's always a difficult
choice - but that's life, and we knew before. From the beginning of
the season in the press conference, we were speaking about this.
Due to the circumstances and the situation in the championship, we
will make different choices." Komatsu, meanwhile, underlined how
with some of the smaller details still being refined, work is
having to be restarted in certain areas. "Obviously, especially for
small teams like us, it's a very significant challenge," the Haas
boss stated. "But it's the same for everyone - it's the name of the
game. So, we are just getting on with it. "But one thing which is
difficult is still the technical regulation is not completely
stable. So, you work on certain things, the regulation changes,
then you have to start again. So yeah. But again - it's the same
for everyone. But it's challenging."