Formula 1 has spent years trying to reduce the impact of dirty air through aerodynamic rules, but the early phase of the F1 2026 regulations suggests the answer may lie elsewhere.
Rather than solving the issue through aero design alone, F1 seems to have hit a basic limitation.
Fast cars will always create turbulent wakes, and high downforce will always be necessary. That problem cannot be removed entirely.
What has shifted the picture is the behaviour of the new power units.
Variations in power delivery have, at times, allowed drivers to stay closer and fight, even when following in disturbed air.
While it is still early, the signs are clear. The dirty air problem no longer has the same impact it once did.

That does not mean the current rules are perfect. There are flaws, and teams are actively working with Formula 1 to refine them.
The dialogue is ongoing, and improvements will come. But even at this stage, the racing has exposed a meaningful step forward.
This does not mean aerodynamics or tyres should be ignored. Both still matter.
But it points to a broader solution. Future rules may need to combine aero improvements with systems that influence power delivery.
The challenge will be to do that without creating something artificial or one-sided, like DRS.
Any approach should allow both drivers to compete on equal terms, rather than giving the car behind a fixed advantage.
There is no finished answer yet. However, the current regulations offer a useful test case.
As more data emerges, F1 has a chance to shape a more complete and lasting fix.
The key takeaway is simple. If the sport wants closer racing, it may need to overcome the effects of dirty air rather than just try to reduce them.
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