While engine performance across manufacturers has largely been balanced in recent years, the 2026 changes could deliver significant, potentially decisive gains. In 2014, when F1 first introduced ...
Jehran NaidooFormula One’s 2026 regulation reset is one of the most significant technical shake-ups the sport has seen in decades. While much of the public focus has landed on electrification and ...
Ford once sketched a road where an engine's pistons never saw oil and engines ran hotter on purpose. In a late‑1980s patent application filed and granted in Europe, the company described an "uncooled ...
Bugatti's groundbreaking V16 engine is redefining the meaning of power in European supercars, blending old-school engineering ...
As the car industry moves further and further towards electrification, most manufacturers aren't bothering to do much development on internal combustion engines. One of the ones that's bucking this ...
Your car and your motorboat both rely on engines to move, but both vehicles use very different types of engines in order to ...
By 2035, Bosch believes 70% of new cars could still have combustion power, though that includes plug-in hybrid and range-extended EVs with engines.
The Italian supercar maker says e-fuel could keep high-performance ICE cars alive for years to come. Lamborghini isn’t ready to say goodbye to the internal combustion engine. In fact, the Italian ...
Stellantis is accelerating production of its gasoline-powered Dodge Charger models at the Windsor Assembly Plant in Ontario, a strategic pivot back to internal combustion engines welcomed by ...
(Reuters) -Europe's embattled carmakers are hoping for a reprieve when Brussels unveils an auto sector package next month, which could water down an effective ban on new combustion engines initially ...
After the engine noise made by F1’s first V6 hybrid power units came under fire, key members of the Audi team have hailed the ...
Trust in necessary changes is a particularly delicate plant. E-car subsidies here and combustion engine ban there therefore ...