
Aston Martin tight-lipped on upgrade timeline for troubled AMR26
Aston Martin's AMR26 faces a long rebuild. The team skipped Miami upgrades to fix Honda power unit vibrations. Mike Krack refuses to promise a date for aero improvements, urging patience.
Aston Martin's early-season campaign is turning into a slow rebuild. After a rare five-week break between Japan and Miami, most teams arrived with visible changes — but Aston Martin brought none. Instead, the Silverstone squad focused on quiet fixes to improve drivability and reduce disruptive vibrations from its Honda power unit.
Why it matters:
Aston Martin's troubles reflect the delicate balance between reliability and performance with a new engine partner. Without a clear upgrade timeline, the team risks being stuck in the midfield while rivals accelerate development.
The details:
- No performance upgrades: Aston Martin was the only team not to list any aero updates on the FIA documentation for Miami.
- Focus on stability: Team trackside chief Mike Krack said the priority has been cutting vibrations and improving drivability — a move that has already brought “substantial” gains.
- Krack's cautious stance: When asked about when meaningful aero upgrades arrive, Krack refused to commit: “I will not get drawn into whether it will be next race… there is a big gap to close. This will not happen overnight.”
- Alonso's hint: Fernando Alonso suggested in Miami that major aerodynamic developments may not come until closer to the summer break.
What's next:
Aston Martin's immediate task is maximizing the current package. “We have a lot to extract from this package the way it is at the moment,” said Krack. The team must keep morale high while waiting for the next evolution — and hope the gap doesn't grow too wide in the meantime.
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