Given their flying start to the season, do you think it’s too early to say the title is Mercedes’ to lose, or have they simply adapted to the new regulations better than everyone else? – Chris

Mercedes have taken pole position for and won every grand prix so far this season. The only time they have been beaten was in Miami, where McLaren’s Lando Norris took pole position for and won the sprint.

Their average advantage in qualifying over the next fastest car – the McLaren – is 0.369 seconds.

After five races, Kimi Antonelli’s championship lead over the first driver not in a Mercedes is 56 points – more than two clear wins.

So, yes, they are strong favourites for the championship and, yes, it’s their title to lose, if you want to put it that way.

The question, as things stands, is just how dominant this season will end up being, rather than whether Mercedes will end it winning the drivers’ and constructors’ championship.

However, that’s not to say they will have things all their own way from now on.

In Miami, McLaren proved that Mercedes are beatable – Norris should have won the grand prix, too, but McLaren failed to pit him at the right time and keep track position at the front.

And Monaco, the next race, is expected to suit Ferrari. They’ve always been strong there, the car’s characteristics this year seem to fit the slow and twisty Monaco track well, and Charles Leclerc, in particular, is amazing around there. Lewis Hamilton is not exactly shabby either.

Whether any team can improve their car enough to mount a consistent challenge to Mercedes on a race-by-race basis, however, is another question.

Of course, other teams have upgrades coming – but so do Mercedes.

If they come out of the Spanish Grand Prix, the week after Monaco, with another convincing win, then it really will look like they are in total control of the season.

As last year, showed, though, you never know. These cars and regulations are very new. It’s far from impossible someone will catch up – and McLaren would be considered the team most likely to do so.

The question will be how long that will take, and whether Mercedes’ advantage in the championships is by then realistically recoverable.

Figure caption,

Mercedes team-mates go head-to-head for F1 crown

With all the talk about changing the split between internal combustion and electrical energy for next year, do they just need to add a bigger fuel tank or totally redesign the engine? – Peter

If the change to a 60:40 split – or thereabouts – between internal combustion and electrical power goes ahead, it will require a revised engine design for all companies.

This is one of the issues at the centre of the debate mentioned in the previous answer.

Audi’s objections to the rules are to do with cost. Ferrari’s centre on the rules around extra development permitted to manufacturers who are assessed to be behind the best engine by specific amounts.

Ferrari is hoping to be granted this extra development, but are arguing that Mercedes don’t need it because they’re ahead. If the rules change, everyone can redevelop their engines.

Politics have ended up involved in a matter which, ideally, everyone would address thinking only of the interests of the sport.

But that’s always the case in F1 – it’s a competition, so teams have a responsibility to look after their own competitive interests.

Some teams were concerned that they would need to build a new chassis for next year to incorporate the bigger fuel tanks that would be needed for a handful of races to get to the end of the grand prix in the event the rules were changed.

This was a problem because a good number of teams are planning to carry over their chassis into next year to save money and stay within the cost cap.

But Racing Bulls team principal Alan Permane revealed at the weekend that there was an agreement to shorten the races with the highest fuel consumption by a lap or two if necessary, to ensure teams can keep their current fuel tank size.

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