2022 AM Wings_Mono Negative
Feature

Unearth Your Greatness: Building for 2026 with Adrian Newey

UYG Adrian header

Together with our Principal Partner, Maaden, our exclusive six-part series deep-dives into the aspirations, motivations and challenges of key members of our team and explores how those factors allow them to unearth their greatness.

In the final episode, Managing Technical Partner Adrian Newey explains how he unlocks the greatness that's allowed him to become Formula One's foremost designer.

Watch the interview below, and keep scrolling for five takeaways from Adrian.

Unearth Your Greatness

Episode six: Adrian

Concluding the second Maaden 'Unearth Your Greatness' series, we sat down with Adrian Newey as he reflects on the craft of racecar design, the power of teamwork, and why even in the data age, the driver's feel still unlocks performance.

WATCH NOW
UYG Adrian YT video

1 | Satisfaction comes from working together 

"We are in a period of transformation. As a team, we've grown rapidly. We now need to settle everybody down and get them working well together. I've never been a believer in saying, 'We will now achieve this or now achieve that.' I think the satisfaction comes from working together to move forwards. If we can achieve that in 2026, that will be the first tick.

"We are a team of 300 engineers. Collaboration is the most important single aspect. It's about how we all work together to make sure we communicate and extract the most from each other. For me personally, that means I spend probably around 50 per cent of my day working with the other engineers, either on a one-to-one level, gathered around the CAD station, or in meetings.

"I never want it to not be with everybody's involvement and buy-in."

There will be setbacks. Enjoy the good periods, but if you're in that bad period, these things always change.

2 | Be curious

"Perform at your best. Set your PBs. It's about getting satisfaction from your work. If you feel you're doing the best job you can, then derive satisfaction from that. That will be greatness.

"Be curious. Look around. Talk to your colleagues, your peers. Try not to pester them, of course, but don't be afraid to ask questions.

"There will be setbacks. Try to get through it, and be aware that life is not flat, both personally and professionally. You have your good periods and your bad periods. Enjoy the good periods, but if you're in that bad period, these things always change."

UYG Adrian fixed image 1

3 | There are 15,000 parts on the car, and they won't carry over to next year.

"Formula One cars have become very complicated beasts as a result of the computer age allowing much greater in-depth research. The result is a car that comprises almost 15,000 parts, and when you're looking at something like next year's car, where we have a big regulation change for 2026, almost none of those parts will be carry-over. It's a mammoth design and engineering exercise.

"What I enjoy is looking at it holistically. Any Formula One team is similar in that it has an aerodynamic department, a mechanical design department, and a simulation and race engineering department. Trying to make sure all those work together, that we have a unified product, not only in its detail but, more importantly, in its concept is a process I find fascinating."

The driver role is as important as it's ever been. You could argue it's even more important now.

4 | Drivers are vital to the process

"When I started, there were no onboard data recorders, no telemetry. The input of the driver was absolutely critical because the only clue the race engineer had about how the car was behaving was from what the driver said.

"As we've moved into the data age, where we have literally thousands of sensors on the car transmitting in real time, we can tell a great deal about what the car is doing. Drivers are wonderfully intuitive animals. They will adapt their driving to suit the strengths and weaknesses of the car.

"All the teams now have driver-in-the-loop simulators. These are engineering tools so we can evaluate different setups, fundamental research and the sorts of things that we can't normally change at a race meeting but we want to know for future development direction.

"We need the driver-in-the-loop rather than a pure offline simulation because none of us have managed to create a good enough driver model that can articulate what that synthetic model is feeling. We need the human to feel it. The driver role is as important as it's ever been. You could argue it's even more important now because we have the ability to combine that with the data to understand exactly what the car is doing and what we need to do to make it faster."

UYG Adrian fixed image 3

5 | Formula One needs human ideas

"I've been in the business for a long time, since I graduated in 1980. I've seen a lot of change in that time, particularly as a result of the computer age and the depth that we can now go into research.

"Those tools allow us that much greater depth and understanding, but they are exactly that: tools. It still takes the human being to come up with the ideas and to then use those tools to the best of effect.

"If you take the example we have now, where we've got a big regulation change for 2026, we're trying to understand the implications of the rule changes, including how the power unit – with its greater electrical side - affects the chassis design and the vehicle dynamics of the car.

"It's a very complicated equation. Even with AI advancing as rapidly as it is, we're a long way off. It depends very heavily on human ideas, and that really is the essence of F1, that ability to conceptualise, to react quickly, to be self-critical."

Swipe below to view the entire 'Unearth Your Greatness' series with Maaden, featuring Fernando, Lance, Andy, Lawrence, Jessica and Tina.

I / AM DROPS

Amplify your fan experience

From exclusive collabs to once-in-a-lifetime prizes, I / AM DROPS is a new series of unique and ultra-limited moments and fan experiences.

Sign up for I / AM or sign in to unlock.

SIGN UP / SIGN IN
I AM DROPS asset for 50:50s 1440x1200