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Aston Martin

Crucial Aston Martin demand outlined after Adrian Newey arrival

Aston Martin is an outfit with a lot of eyes on it ahead of the new power unit regulations, with Stoffel Vandoorne having discussed the team's progress in a RacingNews365 interview.

Alonso Silverstone Quali
Interview
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Aston Martin reserve driver Stoffel Vandoorne has outlined that the British outfit requires "a little bit of time" before all its recent investments result in a giant on track performance boost.

The Silverstone-based outfit has endured a mixed F1 campaign, but has enjoyed stronger results in recent races with both Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll. 

As revealed by Vandoorne, further upgrades are in the pipeline, despite the new power unit regulations being just around the corner. 

Next season represents a significant change for Aston Martin, as it will become a Honda works team and leave the title of being a 'customer' squad. 

Recent huge signing Adrian Newey is busy at work designing its 2026 car, although Vandoorne has insisted that a sudden jump to the front cannot be expected, particularly with so much being unknown surrounding the new regulations.

Reflecting on Aston Martin's season so far and looking ahead to the final 12 rounds, Vandoorne said in a RacingNews365 interview: "Yeah, definitely in the last couple of races we've seen some better performances. 

"There's still a lot of work to do and a lot of things where we're trying still and bringing updates to the car, but little by little, we're getting better. We're more in the mix. 

"The field is just so incredibly close that a couple of tenths one weekend to another can really turn around your results, so it's about optimising that and making sure that we extract absolutely everything out of the car. 

"Obviously, the big focus is 2026, with Adrian having arrived in the team, his focus is pretty much fully on that, let's say, but it's also going to require a little bit of time. Next year is a huge change in regulations. No one really knows exactly what to expect.

"Like, it's that unpredictable right now, but he's obviously someone that has the expertise, that has the CV, the knowledge, and the brains to be able to come up with something really good. So, yeah, it will be interesting to see how next year will be."

Aston Martin 'growing' quickly

Aston Martin owner Lawrence Stroll has not only been investing in the team's employees, but also in its facilities. 

The squad has a brand-new base, new wind tunnel and simulators, all of which also requires time to get into the right window of how the team operates.

"The focus obviously, the team is growing," added Vandoorne. "We've got the new facilities right now. We've got new simulators, new wind tunnel. 

"All of that came quite quickly. The team also kind of doubled in size in the last two, three years. 

"And it takes a little bit of time for an organisation to suddenly ramp up the way of working. One thing in Formula 1 you need is time. Unfortunately, you can't buy the time. 

"But I'm sure that everything is in place now for it to be very successful, whether that will be next year, it's hard to know. But, we've got everything there. We've got the people, we've got the facilities and the only way is forward."

Also interesting:

Join RacingNews365's Ian Parkes and Nick Golding, as they are joined by special guest senior Audi F1 consultant, Allan McNish! The trio discuss Audi's preparations for 2026 and take a general look back on the first half of the current season.

Rather watch the podcast? Then click here!

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