F1 - Sports

If we can’t innovate, We turn back 50/50 & The V8

The ink is barely dry on the Miami GP reports, and the paddock is already buzzing with the news we all knew was coming: the FIA is eyeing a return to V8 power. President Mohammed Ben Sulayem has finally said the quiet part out loud V8s are coming back, potentially by 2030 or 2031.

But my question is simple: Why are we waiting?

If the top brass has already admitted that the “Formula E on steroids” path is a dead end, why are we forcing ourselves to endure five more years of technical complaints, those who can’t innovate move’s backwards? In the world of high-performance engineering, standing still is the same as moving backward. Those who can’t innovate within a logical framework shouldn’t be allowed to anchor the entire sport to a sinking ship.

The 50/50 Fallacy

We were promised a revolution with the 2026 power units a near-equal split between the Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) and electrical deployment. What we’ve actually received is a tactical nightmare. We’re watching the greatest drivers in the world “superclipping” on straights and getting penalized for going flat out because they’ve run out of juice.

The ADUO (Additional Development and Upgrade Opportunities) hierarchy was supposed to fix the parity, but you can’t “balance” a fundamental flaw in physics. If the goal is a return to lighter, louder, and more visceral machines, dragging out the 50/50 system until 2031 is just a slow-motion car crash for the sport’s identity.


Innovation Isn’t Complexity

There’s a segment of the “old money” F1 establishment that thinks complexity equals prestige. They’re wrong. True innovation is efficiency and soul. We’re already running on 100% sustainable fuels. We’ve proven the point.

Why spend hundreds of millions more on batteries that make the cars handle like heavy-duty SUVs just to reach a 2031 deadline? We should be disassembling this failed experiment today.

  • Weight: Kill the massive battery packs and bring back the agility that made F1 what it is.
  • Sound: Give the fans the V8 roar they’ve been begging for since the hybrid era began.
  • Racing: Let the drivers push 100% of the time, not just when the software allows it.

The Bottom Line

Ferrari and the other manufacturers have spent a fortune on 2026 development we get it. But doubling down on a mistake because of “sunk costs” is a loser’s bracket mentality. If the FIA has the power to pivot, they should do it with the same ruthlessness we see on a Sunday afternoon.

Stop the talk about 2031. if they can’t solve the tech remove it. The technology is here now. It’s time to stop waiting for the future and just build it.