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Audi’s protest over Mercedes engine ‘trick’ appears futile
21 January 2026GP BlogCommentaryRace report

Audi’s protest over Mercedes engine ‘trick’ appears futile

Audi claims Mercedes is exploiting a loophole in the new compression‑ratio rule and demands a ban, but the FIA already approved the engine. The protest is more about signaling than a technical win.

Audi entered F1 with a championship ambition, but its in‑house power unit already lags behind Mercedes. The team has lodged a protest, claiming Mercedes uses a prohibited “compression‑ratio trick” that boosts performance, even though the FIA has already homologated the engine.

Why it matters:

  • Competitive balance – A hidden power boost could widen the gap between Mercedes and rivals, undermining the sport’s parity.
  • Sponsor confidence – Publicly challenging the dominant engine supplier signals Audi’s commitment to fairness, reassuring backers.

The details:

  • The alleged trick – Mercedes allegedly employs software‑controlled mapping to effectively raise its compression ratio without violating the rule’s literal text.
  • FIA oversight – The regulator monitored the engine’s development and granted full homologation before the 2026 season, making a reversal unlikely.
  • Audi’s position – Without concrete technical evidence, Audi’s protest is largely symbolic, aimed at drawing attention to a perceived loophole.

What's next:

  • Power‑unit race – Audi’s engineers will keep analyzing Mercedes’ solution, hoping to replicate or improve it for their own engine.
  • Regulation outlook – Unless the FIA revises the compression‑ratio rule, the current gap will stay, and Audi’s protest will fade into the season’s background.

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