Aston Martin Chief Technical Officer Enrico Cardile has explained why the “aggressive approach” Honda is using may help the team succeed in the 2026 Formula 1 championship.
The Silverstone-based squad is heading into an alliance with the Japanese marque, which is re-entering F1 in a permanent capacity after a hiatus of four seasons.
Aston is beginning its partnership with Honda in place of its current power unit deal with Mercedes, in time for the start of the sport’s new and radical set of technical rules.
The team boasts exciting prospects for 2026, chiefly caused by the arrival of Adrian Newey, who has been tasked with designing the challenger to contest the new season.
New boys Audi aside, Honda is the only OEM that is supplying one team, which Cardile, speaking on the Beyond the Grid podcast, believes could give Aston an advantage.
“On one end, during the development, they’re just trying to satisfy our request,” he said. “So they don’t need to find any compromise with different requests on one hand.
“On the other hand, I guess they can push a bit more on development, because having to provide power units just to one team, the quantities are lower than having multiple teams, and this is allowing them to push more for the development.”

Cardile ‘surprised’ by Honda commitment
Cardile, who quit Ferrari to join Aston, is working closely alongside Newey to come up with an interpretation of the new regulations they hope will propel veteran Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll to greater heights.
The Italian is therefore unable to truly witness all of the work Honda is putting into the project, but has observed a high level of drive and compliance to meet Aston’s demands.
“Personally since I joined, I’m focusing my attention on the chassis, so just marginally, I’m seeing what Honda is doing,” he explained.
“For what I see, I am surprised by the commitment and the aggressive approach they have.
“They’re very open to collaborating, on satisfying the requests we have [on the] chassis side but my focus is so far is completely, I would say, on the chassis development, rather than the power unit.”
The fresh set of regulations was previously deemed “scary” by Newey, and initial findings may have given Cardile reason to believe there was little wriggle room for being innovative.
But with further investigation, he believes that, in fact, he has now found some “freedom” in developing what will be the AMR26.
“I had the same feeling I remember in 2021 with the new regulation coming, which compared to the previous one, they seemed to be oversimplified, extremely restrictive,” he reflected.
“Then when you start working on them, you find that, okay, they are restrictive but actually you have also room for being creative, for finding new solutions, for getting load out of the development.
“So basically, I’m feeling the same when we started looking at them, okay, it’s a bit sad that they’re over-constrained but then actually working on them, you find the degree of freedom for developing the car.”
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