Badger wrote: ↑27 Apr 2026, 20:45
diffuser wrote: ↑27 Apr 2026, 19:48
peewon wrote: ↑27 Apr 2026, 15:42
I think we agree on the general point that the popularity of FE is nowhere enough for Liberty to even consider switching F1 to electric? Regardless of the metric you want to use. One nitpick is that FE graph goes till 2024 whereas the F1 graph is till 2025. FE was also back above $200m for 2025.
I think FE will reach its peak popularity when the cars are not battery limited. It will be interesting to see what that looks like. However, I think ICE will always remain the premium series for the foreseeable future.
The only VALID reason not switch to full electric is if ICE is faster. Right now it is, that will change in the near future.
The past 3 weekends have shown us differently. It’s not just about the lap time but also how the car achieves that lap time. Too much harvesting, especially in the corners, is poison for F1.
And you’re delusional if you think we are remotely close to a battery that could deliver F1 grade energy density and discharge rates. There’s a reason FE still has to compete on Mickey Mouse tracks with constant energy management, and they still can’t get over 100 km range. The new gen 4 car has upped the power by 50%, it’s also 150 kg heavier than the last generation because it needs a bigger battery, and 250 kg heavier than F1. There’s a lot of hype and misinformation in the EV space, a lot of people puffing their chest and making claims that they can’t live up to. In fact this mentality is how F1 ended up in this situation in the first place, through hubris and politics, they overpromised and underdelivered.
The battery density in the Gen4 is 250ish wh/kg. Achieving a 1,000 Wh/kg battery density is expected by the late 2020s to early 2030s, based on current research and industry roadmaps.
WeLion, a Chinese battery developer, has already achieved 824 Wh/kg in lab tests and aims to surpass 1,000 Wh/kg in the long term.
They and other companies like Dongfeng are targeting mass production of advanced solid-state batteries by 2027–2028, though initial deployments will likely be in niche applications like robotics or premium EVs. When they hit the Gen 5 who knows but that's 4 times the energy for the same weight of battery that they currently have.