Fernando Alonso is disappointed by Aston Martin no longer having spare batteries for its Honda power unit in what has been a disastrous start to its 2026 Formula 1 campaign.
The Silverstone outfit entered a works’ deal with Honda for the new regulation cycle this year, but vast problems have arisen in the buildup to the first race due to excessive vibrations in the engine.
Aston has continuously suffered battery failures as a result, and the situation is now so dire that team boss Adrian Newey revealed it doesn’t have any spares for this weekend’s Australian Grand Prix.
It therefore puts the squad at risk of not starting the Melbourne contest but even if it did, its AMR26 is believed to be restricted to just 25 of the scheduled 58 laps.
“We are okay to do it,” Alonso told Sky Sports. “It’s more a question for Honda if they have a stock.”
“Obviously, I feel disappointed to not have a stock,” he then said on F1 TV, “[with Honda] only supplying one team, but this is the situation.”
Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing
Photo by: Alastair Staley / LAT Images via Getty Images
The two-time F1 champion consequently skipped FP1 at Albert Park before completing just 18 laps in second practice, where he was 4.933s off the pace with Aston clearly the championship’s worst team.
“Not much learning, to be honest,” said Alonso, whose team-mate Lance Stroll did 16 laps across both sessions and was also several seconds behind.
“Unfortunately, the Honda issue in FP1 and some Honda issues as well in FP2, a little bit limited our number of laps today.
“That was not needed again because we need to recover a little bit in terms of understanding the car as well and the window of where this car operates.
“Obviously, we brought a completely new package into this race and we need to understand where to run that package in terms of set-up. We didn’t manage too many laps today, so hopefully a cleaner FP3 tomorrow.”
The problems at Aston have long been known after it conducted limited running in pre-season testing, but more and more has come out across this Melbourne weekend.
Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing
Photo by: Getty Images
It didn’t know until November, for example, that the Honda workforce was largely new and inexperienced following its split from Red Bull, and Newey is already telling the Japanese marque to focus on next year.
What arguably makes it worse is that Aston ditched the highly competitive Mercedes engine for Honda, but there are also issues on the chassis side as it started its wind tunnel programme four months late.
But the team, and Alonso, are putting on a brave face as the Spaniard said: “We are much less negative than media and people around. It’s nice to tell the story when someone is doing great and when someone is doing wrongly or things are not going well.
“You try to exaggerate both ends and we know where we are. As I said yesterday, we have a big challenge in front of us but everyone in the team is embracing the challenge in a way and trying everything we can to go out of the situation.
“This is Formula 1, unfortunately technology is very complex and things require a little bit of time and we are running every day on free practises and every week grand prix to grand prix and maybe we don’t see the progress that we all want to see.
“But there are things happening, smaller or bigger, but there is always progress. So let’s hope that it’s visible in lap time as soon as possible.”
Photos from Australian GP – Friday
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