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Lewis Hamilton Baffled by Mercedes’ Huge Performance Edge

Highlights
- Hamilton surprised by Mercedes’ “serious” power advantage in F1
- Mercedes power unit leads with seven wins from eight races
- FIA awarded Red Bull Powertrains ADUO status amid controversy
- Ferrari’s upgraded power unit failed to match Mercedes’ top speed
- Teams analyze power unit designs ahead of 2026 season battles
Lewis Hamilton says Mercedes holds a “serious” power advantage in Formula 1, speaking after the Red Bull Ring weekend, where straight-line speed again defined performance during the Austrian Grand Prix weekend.
He shadowed George Russell early before fading across the first stint, finishing fifth on a three-stop plan. The pattern supports his view that Mercedes’ power unit leads the field.
Mercedes-powered cars have seven wins from eight races, plus all three sprints. Yet the FIA reportedly granted Red Bull Powertrains ADUO status after ICE benchmarking, a call that Hamilton questions. Official details remain pending.

Hamilton points to end-of-straight speed as decisive. He says rivals lose deployment while the Mercedes package keeps pulling, and wonders if battery strategy, combustion efficiency, or turbo sizing explains the gain.
Ferrari introduced an upgraded power unit in Austria but still lacked top-end speed. That exposes the SF-26’s recurring deficit versus the Mercedes Hybrid Power Unit on long straights.
The ADUO debate shapes 2026 planning as teams scrutinize architecture, energy deployment, and cooling. Mercedes, meanwhile, indicates there will be no ADUO upgrade during this phase.
Strategy cannot fully mask the trend. Hamilton’s three-stop approach and traffic complicate the picture, but the straight-line advantage appears consistent across recent venues, not just Spielberg.

The FIA’s eventual clarification will influence competitive narratives and political positioning. Until then, teams chase dyno-to-track correlation to verify deployment maps, turbo behavior, and end-of-straight performance.
Attention now turns to Silverstone, where layout variety tests efficiency and drag. The question is whether rivals can erode the deficit and reshape the title fight.
Visual Summary
Mercedes Power Breakaway
plus all sprint races
“Serious power at the end of the straights,
far more than anybody else.”
Tech Mystery:
73%
?
Still lacking top speed
FIA ADUO status awarded

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.






