Aston Martin's 2026 F1 car is finally on track, causes red flag
Aston’s AMR26 emerged from the garage late on Thursday afternoon
Lance Stroll, Aston Martin
Photo by: Aston Martin Racing
Aston Martin has finally taken to the track at Formula 1’s Barcelona pre-season test, but caused a red flag within just an hour.
The Silverstone-based team skipped the first three days of testing as it couldn’t produce its new challenger, the AMR26, on time.
The Barcelona shakedown is taking place behind closed doors over five days with each team entitled to three days’ running, which softened Aston’s setback.
Still, instead of three days, the team is getting just over one day – at best – as it took to the track around 5pm local time on Thursday, after reaching the circuit on Wednesday evening.
Shortly before the chequered flag was due to be waved at 6pm, the red flag put a definitive end to proceedings as Lance Stroll stopped at the pitlane entry, SoyMotor reports.
"We are in a bit of a unique situation," Mike Krack, Aston Martin's chief trackside officer, told F1 after the day's running.
"We welcome Honda, our new power unit partner. We have made our first gearbox in very many, many years, and you pair that with new chassis regulations, new power unit regulations... basically you could say it's the worst case or the best case, but it's a huge change for us as a team, to be a works team, a factory team, together with these regulations. Then we have Adrian [Newey] on board, so it's all very exciting and a lot of change.
Lance Stroll, Aston Martin
Photo by: Aston Martin Racing
"Formula 1 is not waiting for you, so you have to be ready. We were now a little bit late, but we made it to this test, so I think we can be proud and happy of that achievement."
According to the Spanish publication, Stroll’s fastest time was a 1m46.404s, some 30 seconds slower than Mercedes’ benchmark. He completed just five laps.
The AMR26 is Aston’s first Adrian Newey-designed challenger, as well as the only Honda-powered machinery on the grid, meaning the Japanese manufacturer has been unable to collect any data so far.
Last week, Honda leaders displayed startling pessimism about their new F1 power unit. “The 2026 regulations are technically extremely challenging, and perhaps we will struggle,” said Koji Watanabe, president of Honda Racing Corporation.
Tetsushi Kakuda, Honda’s F1 project leader, told Motorsport.com: “The electrification side is progressing as planned. However, that is not necessarily the case for the internal combustion engine.”
Photos from Barcelona shakedown
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
Barcelona shakedown, in photos
We want your opinion!
What would you like to see on Motorsport.com?
Take our 5 minute survey.- The Motorsport.com Team
Share Or Save This Story
Niels Wittich: Michael Masi a “scapegoat” who “didn’t do much wrong” at Abu Dhabi 2021
When Paul Di Resta beat Sebastian Vettel to the F3 title
Mercedes, McLaren, Alpine in action with their 2026 F1 cars
Fernando Alonso shares touching gift from F1 after birth of son
These are the youngest F1 drivers to lead the world championship
What's next for Aston Martin and Honda after torrid start to F1 2026?
Lance Stroll makes GT debut at GTWCE Paul Ricard
Lance Stroll: Aston Martin F1 struggles a factor in surprise GT outing
The one thing Aston Martin needs more than a new team principal in F1
Latest news
Max Verstappen’s GT3 rise praised by F1 safety car driver Bernd Maylander
Cadillac F1 announces free Miami fan experience for 2026 grand prix weekend
How to watch NASCAR at Kansas: Weekend schedule, start time, TV
Kevin Harvick says Alex Bowman needs to win to keep Hendrick job
Feature
Is it now or never for Russell in hunt for F1 title?
The top 11 lost F1 victories after the flag
The remnant of the V10 era in F1's previous switch to V8 engines
How Ferrari must step up its efforts to end its long F1 championship wait
Subscribe and access Motorsport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
You have 2 options:
- Become a subscriber.
- Disable your adblocker.
Top Comments