F1 teams 3D printing pistons to circumvent compression rules

Automotive discussions not related to HEMIs.
Post Reply
User avatar
scottm
Posts: 3557
Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2001 7:00 pm
Location: Texas
Contact:

F1 teams 3D printing pistons to circumvent compression rules

Post by scottm »

Image

How F1 teams are using 3D printed pistons to circumvent compression rules
https://www.voxelmatters.com/how-f1-tea ... ion-rules/
Additive manufacturing has enabled targeted thermal expansion to boost effective compression beyond the 16:1 limit set for the 2026 season, and is understandably ruffling feathers in the paddock

Formula 1’s governing body, the FIA, introduced a revised compression ratio ceiling of 16:1 for the 2026 season, down from the previous limit of 18:1, with the aim of reducing engine development costs and lowering barriers for new entrants. But as has been the case many times before in a sport where the world’s top engineers are employed, a smart loophole is being exploited to squeeze the absolute maximum out of the cars, and this time it involves 3D printing.

The FIA measures the static geometric piston compression ratio with the engine at ambient temperature, calculating the difference between cylinder volume at bottom dead center and top dead center. That measurement methodology left an opening.

At racing speeds and temperatures, pistons expand and connecting rods stretch, altering the effective compression ratio beyond what the static test captures. Mercedes and Red Bull have been reported in F1 media as two teams that have identified this gap, and set about engineering pistons specifically designed to exploit it.

Additive manufacturing as a performance tool

F1 teams have shifted in recent years from forging pistons from steel billet — a subtractive process — to 3D printing them. The additive process allows engineers to design complex internal structures within solid metal components and vary material density throughout each part.

Engineers at both Mercedes and Red Bull appear to have used that capability to create internal piston architectures that channel combustion heat toward specific points, causing the piston to expand more than a conventionally manufactured equivalent would. The result, if effective, is a compression ratio at operating temperature that exceeds the 16:1 figure recorded during the FIA’s static test.

Rivals seek regulatory clarification and the FIA are on it

Other teams reportedly submitted a joint letter to the FIA requesting clarification on the engine regulations and asking that a measurement methodology be established to assess compression ratios at operating temperature.

The FIA has reacted, and a rule change that will measure compression ratio at both ambient and a “representative operating temperature of 130ºC” has been proposed, due to come into effect at the start of August.

That will be just over the halfway point in the season, meaning there’s still a lot of racing under the current grey-area rule to be run this year. As it stands, Mercedes has won the opening two Grands Prix of 2026.
Based on the times in the first two races, I doubt Red Bull is using this little trick.
I'm no Merc fan, but it is not cool to see the FIA changing rules during the season.

#Formula1 #F1 #FIA #Mercedes #Redbull #3DPrinting #Pistons #CompressionRatios
George
Posts: 744
Joined: Wed Aug 25, 2004 4:12 pm
Location: Fl

Re: F1 teams 3D printing pistons to circumvent compression rules

Post by George »

"At racing speeds and temperatures, pistons expand and connecting rods stretch, altering the effective compression ratio beyond what the static test captures." Never thought about that before. Probably get expansion in street engines also. Been good if they posted what the difference is.
Post Reply