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Formula 1
British GP
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Formula 1
British GP
Mercedes investigating George Russell's British GP top speed issue

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MotoGP
German GP
Marc Marquez: 'My biggest MotoGP opponent is my fitness'

Is Red Bull better or worse off one year after Christian Horner's sacking? Our writers have their say

Formula 1
British GP
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Maverick Vinales: 'KTM sent me a contract, I signed it, and two weeks later they cancelled it'

MotoGP
German GP
Maverick Vinales: 'KTM sent me a contract, I signed it, and two weeks later they cancelled it'

One year on: How Red Bull changed post-Christian Horner

Formula 1
British GP
One year on: How Red Bull changed post-Christian Horner

How technical issues have cost Francesco Bagnaia 40 points in 2026 MotoGP title fight

MotoGP
German GP
How technical issues have cost Francesco Bagnaia 40 points in 2026 MotoGP title fight

Why there are no quick fixes for all of Max Verstappen’s frustrations at Red Bull

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
British GP
Why there are no quick fixes for all of Max Verstappen’s frustrations at Red Bull

Formula 1 refuelling return killed off

Formula 1 chiefs have formally canned the idea of refuelling coming back to the sport in 2017, Motorsport.com has learned.

Mark Webber, Red Bull Racing, practice refueling
Scuderia Ferrari, refuelling
Giancarlo Fisichella, Force India F1 Team, VJM-01, refuelling
Refuelling Hose
Renault F1 Team, refuelling practice

The idea of refuelling came up in a May meeting of F1's Strategy Group as part of an effort to try to improve the spectacle and make cars faster.

However, as Motorsport.com revealed last month, the idea stalled when detailed analysis of the implications of a return of refuelling showed that it could impact negatively on the sport.

Although Ferrari subsequently made clear that it was still in favour of the concept, discussion at last week's Strategy Group meeting delivered a consensus that the idea should be dropped.

Despite the speed benefit of having cars quicker in the race, the fear was that refuelling would be bad for racing as it would encourage all teams to run the same strategies.

2017 car developments on track

F1 teams also agreed to ramp up work on preparing the new faster and more challenging cars for 2017.

The FIA has approved a concession to allow teams to devote extra CFD capacity until July 20 to work on the 2017 concepts.

Information gathered from this will then be given to the governing body for a presentation of formal ideas. Particular focus will be put on ensuring that any changes to the cars do not jeopardise overtaking.

The hope is that the next big step in finalising the ideas can be prepared at the next F1 Strategy Group meeting in September.

Customer car talks on hold

Although discussions about customer cars dominated Strategy Group meetings earlier this year, the idea has now been put on hold.

Despite the need for there to be a contingency plan if grid numbers do fall, teams agreed that there was no need to aggressively push forward with the concept for now.

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