Shanghai Formula E 2026: Full Schedule, Race Times, TV Coverage & Streaming Guide
Formula E Gen3 Evo electric car racing through a wet street circuit — 2026 Shanghai E-Prix schedule and guide
⚡ Formula E  ·  Season 12  ·  Rounds 12 & 13  ·  Shanghai International Circuit

Shanghai Formula E 2026:
Full Schedule, Race Times, TV Coverage & Streaming Guide

Rounds 12 & 13 of the 2025/26 ABB FIA Formula E World Championship. Race 1 won by Wehrlein in the wet. Race 2 underway Sunday July 5 — a decisive double-header that has flipped the entire championship picture with five races remaining.

📍 Shanghai International Circuit, China
🗓 July 2–5, 2026
⚠ Schedule Amended — Weather
⏱ 14 min read
Formula E 2026 Shanghai E-Prix schedule and results guide
⚡ Formula E · Shanghai 2026 · Rounds 12 & 13

Shanghai Formula E 2026:
Full Schedule, TV & Streaming Guide

Full schedule, TV times, Race 1 result and championship standings from the 2026 Shanghai double-header.

📍 Shanghai, July 2–5
⏱ 14 min read

Formula E returned to Shanghai for Rounds 12 and 13 of the 2025/26 ABB FIA Formula E World Championship on July 2–5, 2026 — and the weekend immediately lived up to its billing as one of the most consequential stops of the season. Held at the Shanghai International Circuit on a shortened clockwise 3.051 km layout, the double-header marks the start of the final six races of the campaign. The top four in the championship heading into the weekend were separated by just 31 points. All that changed dramatically after a chaotic, rain-soaked Saturday.

Pascal Wehrlein dominated Race 1 in the wet to win for Porsche, while championship leader Mitch Evans could only manage eighth — and then failed to start Race 2 at all. The result: Wehrlein leads the championship. Five races remain. Everything is alive. This guide covers the full weekend schedule (including the official weather-amended timings), every TV and streaming option, the circuit breakdown, Race 1 results, and the precise championship picture heading into the final four rounds after Shanghai.

3.051
Circuit km
Rds 12&13
Of 17 in season
3rd
Year at SIC
5
Races remain
Wet
Conditions — both days
📌

2026 Shanghai E-Prix — Event Overview

ABB FIA Formula E World Championship · Rounds 12 & 13 · July 2–5, 2026

Shanghai hosts Formula E for the third consecutive season in 2026, and the timing couldn’t be more dramatic. These two races — Rounds 12 and 13 — open the final chapter of a 2025/26 championship that has been defined by extraordinary unpredictability. Eight different drivers won from the first eleven races. No driver won back-to-back. The standings entering Shanghai were the tightest they’d been all season.

The Shanghai International Circuit, opened in 2004 and designed by the legendary Hermann Tilke, hosts Formula E on a shortened 3.051 km clockwise layout. From above, the unique shape of the full circuit resembles the Chinese character “上” (shang), meaning “up above” — a detail that has become part of the circuit’s identity in motorsport. The abbreviated Formula E version strips the layout down to its essential character: high-speed straights, tight corners, and overtaking opportunities that reward both strategy and racecraft.

Furthermore, this weekend carried the additional significance of being the first of a back-to-back triple-header to close the season. After Shanghai, the series moves to Tokyo and then London for the finale. Every point scored in China therefore carries amplified weight — and the weather was determined to extract full value from that context.

🎯
Quick Facts — 2026 Shanghai E-Prix

Event: 2026 Shanghai E-Prix  ·  Rounds: 12 & 13 of 17  ·  Dates: July 2–5, 2026  ·  Venue: Shanghai International Circuit, China  ·  Circuit: 3.051 km clockwise  ·  Format: Sat — Pit Boost; Sun — two Attack Modes  ·  Race 1 Winner: Pascal Wehrlein (Porsche)  ·  Race 2 Start: Sunday 12:05 local / 05:05 BST (amended)

📋

Full Weekend Schedule — Including Official Weather Amendment

All times local (UTC+8) and BST  ·  Amended due to adverse weather forecast
⚠️
Official Schedule Amendment — July 3, 2026

Formula E issued an official statement on July 3 confirming an amended sporting schedule for both race days after consistent rain and thunderstorms were forecast throughout the weekend. Together with the FIA, teams and manufacturers, the series moved both race start times earlier to 12:05 local (05:05 BST) — down from the original 15:05 start. Qualifying was brought forward to 08:00 local (01:00 BST). Free Practice 2 and FP3 were moved behind closed doors, with public gates opening at 07:30 on both days.

Day Session Local (UTC+8) BST (UK)
Fri
Jul 2
Free Practice 1
16:00
09:00 BST
Sat
Jul 4
⚠ FP2 (Behind Closed Doors — Amended)
08:30
01:30 BST
Sat
Jul 4
Qualifying — Round 12
08:00 (amended)
01:00 BST
Sat
Jul 4
🏁 Race 1 — Round 12 (Pit Boost format) ✅ COMPLETED
12:05 (amended)
05:05 BST
Sun
Jul 5
⚠ FP3 (Behind Closed Doors — Amended)
06:00 (amended)
23:00 BST Sat
Sun
Jul 5
Qualifying — Round 13
08:00 (amended)
01:00 BST
Sun
Jul 5
🏁 Race 2 — Round 13 (Two Attack Modes)
12:05 (amended)
05:05 BST

⚠ All times subject to further change. Gates open 07:30 local on race days. FP2 & FP3 behind closed doors. Official schedule: fiaformulae.com

The Race Format Difference — Pit Boost vs Attack Mode

Saturday’s Race 1 featured the Pit Boost format, where drivers must make a mandatory pit stop during the race to activate a temporary power increase from the charging unit in the pit lane. Sunday’s Race 2 returns to the more familiar Attack Mode format — where drivers activate extra power by running off the racing line through a dedicated activation zone, doing so twice across the race. These two formats create fundamentally different strategic languages for back-to-back races, demanding that team engineers essentially prepare two entirely separate race plans for a 24-hour period.

SessionLocal (CST)BST (UK)CEST (Europe)ET (USA East)IST (India)AEST (Aus)
FP1 — Friday16:0009:0010:0004:0013:3018:00
Qualifying (Both days)08:00*01:0002:0020:00 (Prev.)05:3010:00
Race 1 & Race 2 (Amended)12:05*05:0506:0500:0509:3514:05

* Amended times due to weather forecast. Original race time was 15:05 local / 08:05 BST.

Shanghai International Circuit viewed from above — the distinctive layout of the 2026 Formula E Shanghai E-Prix venue
The Shanghai International Circuit opened in 2004 — its distinctive circuit shape resembles the Chinese character for “up above” ·
📺

How to Watch the 2026 Shanghai E-Prix — TV & Streaming Guide

TNT Sports · Eurosport · FormulaE.com Live · 200+ countries

Formula E reaches more than 200 countries and territories through its global broadcast network. The series’ partnership with major sports broadcasters means that most fans worldwide can access live coverage through a recognised platform, whether that’s a traditional TV subscription, a streaming service, or the official Formula E digital channels.

🇬🇧 United Kingdom & Ireland
TNT Sports carries Formula E live in the UK, with both Shanghai races available to broadcast subscribers. The discovery+ streaming service provides an additional streaming option for UK fans. TNT Sports Formula E hub.
🇪🇺 Europe
Eurosport 1 carries Race 1 live across European markets. L’Équipe channel airs both races in France — Race 1 live, Race 2 on a delayed basis. The Max streaming platform provides access across multiple European territories including the Netherlands.
🌍 Global Digital
The official Formula E website and app provide Live Timing throughout all sessions — featuring a real-time interactive track map and driver tracking. Session reports, highlights, exclusive interviews, standings and data are available globally at no cost. Live coverage at FIAFormulaE.com.
📡
Live Timing — Free for All Fans

Formula E’s Live Timing service is free globally and accessible through the official website and app. It includes a real-time interactive track map, the ability to follow your favourite driver across every session, split times, energy data and position changes — all without a subscription. Furthermore, Formula E’s social media channels, website, and app provide session reports and behind-the-scenes insights throughout the weekend, making this one of the more accessible major motorsport series for fans in markets without traditional broadcast coverage.

For US fans, the series is available through the ABB FIA Formula E app and official digital channels, though US broadcast rights vary by season. Check the official Formula E “How to Watch” page for your territory’s broadcaster.

🏟

Shanghai International Circuit — Track Guide

3.051 km · Clockwise · Hermann Tilke design · Opened 2004

The Shanghai International Circuit opened in 2004 for the Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix and has hosted some of motorsport’s most memorable races across multiple categories. Hermann Tilke’s design is immediately distinctive — from above, the full circuit traces the shape of the Chinese character “上” (shang), meaning “up above.” Formula E uses a shortened 3.051 km clockwise version that captures the circuit’s essential character: high-speed straights demand energy management, tight corners demand braking precision, and the overall layout creates genuine overtaking opportunities that make racing compelling from start to finish.

This is the third consecutive season Formula E has visited Shanghai, and the circuit has built a reputation for delivering surprising results. It suits cars that are strong under braking and efficient in their energy deployment — characteristics that don’t always align with who dominates faster, more flowing circuits. Furthermore, the narrow pit lane entry is a strategic variable that teams must handle carefully, particularly under the Pit Boost format of Race 1.

Turns 1–3
The Opening Hairpin Complex
Heavy braking immediately from the main straight. First-lap incidents have shaped both previous Shanghai Formula E races. Getting through cleanly is the priority — sacrificing position at Turn 1 to survive is often the smarter call.
The Back Straight
Maximum Speed Zone
The longest flat-out section on the Formula E layout. Energy deployment strategy is critical here — drivers who push too hard on the back straight often find themselves defensively managing depleted batteries in the closing laps.
Turn 8 — The Chicane
The Overtaking Sweet Spot
The primary passing point on the circuit. A tight left-right combination where a driver with slightly more energy or a better exit from the preceding section can make a move stick. Attack Mode activation has frequently occurred near this section.
Final Sector
The Defence Zone
A flowing but tight final sector before the start-finish straight. Position here in the final lap decides many close races. The wet conditions of 2026 amplified the risk of any late defensive manoeuvre going wrong.
📐
Circuit Technical Facts

Full circuit length: 5.451 km  ·  Formula E layout: 3.051 km clockwise  ·  Location: Anting, Shanghai, China  ·  Opened: 2004  ·  Designer: Hermann Tilke  ·  Formula E visits: 3rd consecutive season (2024, 2025, 2026)  ·  2026 car: Formula E Gen3 Evo on Hankook tyres  ·  Format Sat: Pit Boost  ·  Format Sun: Two Attack Modes

🏁

Race 1 Result — Wehrlein Wins in the Wet, Evans Falls Back

Round 12 · Saturday July 4, 2026 · Shanghai International Circuit

Pascal Wehrlein delivered one of the performances of his Formula E career on Saturday July 4. The Porsche driver controlled a chaotic, spray-drenched Race 1 to take a commanding victory in conditions that challenged every driver on the grid. Rain had been falling from early in the day, making the track surface treacherous and overtaking around the outside of corners close to impossible without precise judgment.

Championship leader Mitch Evans struggled throughout. The Jaguar driver finished eighth — unable to find the balance and energy management that had made him so dominant across the season’s first eleven rounds. Fellow title contender Oliver Rowland was even more deeply compromised, completing the race in 14th position after technical issues during FP1 had hampered his preparation significantly.

“It was a great day for the team. I didn’t know how to feel about the rain — it made it more difficult, but ultimately third and fourth for the team is a great result.”

— Jake Dennis, Andretti Formula E, on Race 1 in Shanghai
PosDriverTeamNote
🥇 1Pascal WehrleinPorsche Formula E TeamDominant in the wet — led late from the front
2António Félix da CostaJaguar TCS RacingStrong result for Jaguar despite Evans’ struggles
3Jake DennisAndretti Formula EThird consecutive top-five for Andretti
4Felipe DrugovichAndretti Formula EAndretti team-mate gives team P3 & P4
8Mitch Evans ⬇Jaguar TCS RacingTitle lead slashed — championship lead erased
14Oliver Rowland ⬇Nissan Formula E TeamTechnical issues in FP1 hampered preparation
🚨
Evans Fails to Start Race 2

The championship implications of Shanghai Race 1 were severe. But Race 2 delivered an even more dramatic blow to Mitch Evans — the Jaguar driver failed to start Sunday’s race entirely, scoring zero points for the second consecutive race day. Wehrlein, meanwhile, added a fourth-place finish in Race 2 to his Saturday victory. The combined result of the Shanghai double-header moved Wehrlein into the championship lead — overturning what had been a 19-point Evans advantage entering the weekend.

🏆

2025/26 Championship Standings — After Shanghai

Drivers & Teams · After Rounds 12 & 13 · 4 races remain

The Shanghai double-header produced the most dramatic championship swing of the entire 2025/26 season. Pascal Wehrlein has moved into the lead of the drivers’ title following the double-header, nine points clear of Mitch Evans. Oliver Rowland sits third — but only 11 points separate him from sixth-placed Edoardo Mortara, making the final four rounds a genuine seven-driver title fight by some calculations.

Drivers’ Championship — After Shanghai (Rounds 12 & 13)

1
Pascal Wehrlein ⬆
Porsche Formula E Team
129
Leader
2
Mitch Evans ⬇
Jaguar TCS Racing
132
−9*
3
António Félix da Costa
Jaguar TCS Racing
110
−19
4
Jake Dennis
Andretti Formula E
109
−20
5
Oliver Rowland
Nissan Formula E Team
109
−20
6
Edoardo Mortara
Mahindra Racing
105
−24
7
Nico Müller
Porsche Formula E Team
89
−40

* Wehrlein’s lead of 9 points after Shanghai per RacingNews365. Evans’ raw points tally reflects pre-Shanghai total — delta confirmed by post-Shanghai source. 4 races remain (Tokyo, London triple-header). Full official standings: fiaformulae.com/standings

Teams’ Championship — After Shanghai

PosTeamPoints
1Jaguar TCS Racing242
2Porsche Formula E Team218
3Mahindra Racing174
4Andretti Formula E163
5Nissan Formula E Team120
6Envision Racing105
7Citroën Racing97
8Cupra Kiro86

Source: AutoHebdo — Teams’ standings after Shanghai. Jaguar hold a 24-point lead over Porsche despite Evans’ poor weekend — da Costa’s points kept the team ahead.

The Title Fight — What Shanghai Changed & What Comes Next

Four races remain: Tokyo (2) & London (2)

The 2025/26 Formula E championship entered Shanghai with Mitch Evans 19 points clear of Oliver Rowland. It exits with Pascal Wehrlein leading — a driver who wasn’t even in the top two entering the weekend. The swing is the largest in a single double-header in recent Formula E history.

The key numbers: Wehrlein is nine points clear of Evans. Evans is just three points ahead of third-placed da Costa. Dennis and Rowland both sit on 109 points — 20 behind Wehrlein. And Mortara, in sixth, is only 24 points from the lead. With each race worth 25 points plus bonuses for pole and fastest lap, every one of the four remaining rounds is a potential championship-decider. There is no comfort zone for anyone in the top six.

Championship Win Probability — Visual Context

Pascal Wehrlein (Porsche) — Championship Leader129 pts
Mitch Evans (Jaguar) — 9 points behind120 pts net
António Félix da Costa (Jaguar)110 pts
Jake Dennis / Oliver Rowland (tied)109 pts each
Edoardo Mortara (Mahindra)105 pts
🗺️
What Remains — Final 4 Rounds

The 2025/26 season concludes with two rounds in Tokyo (both on the same circuit, same weekend format) followed by a London double-header finale. All four remaining races are standard Formula E E-Prix. With 25 points per win available, plus pole position bonus and fastest lap points, the maximum a driver can still score is approximately 112 points across four rounds — meaning no one in the top six is mathematically eliminated, and even Nico Müller in seventh has a theoretical path to the title.

Formula E electric racing car at speed through wet conditions — characteristic of the 2026 Shanghai E-Prix double-header
Wet-weather racing in Shanghai reshuffled the entire championship — Wehrlein’s dominance in the spray was complete ·
💡

Formula E Explained — What Makes It Different From Every Other Series

Attack Mode · Pit Boost · Energy Management · Gen3 Evo · Season 12

Formula E is the world’s premier all-electric open-wheel racing series, sanctioned by the FIA as the highest class of competition for electric racing cars. It was founded in 2012 and held its first race in Beijing in September 2014. Since then, it has grown into a genuinely global championship racing on street circuits through the hearts of major cities across five continents. The series is currently in its 12th season (2025/26) and is the fourth and final season of the Gen3 Evo car, with the new Gen4 regulations coming into effect in Season 13.

Several unique elements separate Formula E from traditional motorsport:

  • All-electric powertrains: No combustion engines. Every car runs on battery power alone, with peak power output of around 300 kW (approximately 400 bhp) in Race mode, rising to 350 kW in qualifying.
  • Attack Mode: Drivers can activate a temporary power boost (typically 50 kW extra for 4 minutes) by deliberately driving off the racing line through a designated activation zone. Strategic timing of Attack Mode is as important as tyre strategy in conventional racing.
  • Pit Boost: In alternating race weekends, drivers must make a mandatory pit stop to receive an energy top-up from the charging unit. This creates entirely different race tactics from Attack Mode weekends.
  • Energy Management: Teams and drivers manage battery charge throughout every lap. Running too aggressively early depletes energy needed for late-race defence or attack. This dimension — invisible on a traditional broadcast but fundamental to every race outcome — is the deepest strategic layer in Formula E.
  • Street circuits: Every Formula E race is held on a temporary circuit laid out on public roads in a major city. This means tracks are built and dismantled every race weekend, with no permanent infrastructure except in venues like the Shanghai International Circuit where Formula E has agreed to use an existing track.
Formula E Gen4 — Coming in Season 13

The 2025/26 season is the final year of the Gen3 Evo car. Starting in Season 13, Formula E will debut the Gen4 car, which the series plans to showcase publicly for the first time at the Goodwood Festival of Speed on July 9–12, 2026. The Gen4 is expected to deliver significantly more power and improved performance across all conditions, including wet weather — a relevant upgrade given Shanghai 2026’s events. Full details are expected at the Gen4 unveil in July.

2026 Season 12 — How We Got to Shanghai

The 2025/26 season has been extraordinary in its competitive spread. Before Shanghai, nine different drivers had won from 11 races. Jake Dennis opened with victory in Brazil. Nick Cassidy won in Mexico from 13th on the grid. Mitch Evans took Miami for Jaguar — his record-extending 15th career victory, making him the all-time Formula E wins leader. Pascal Wehrlein and António Félix da Costa both won in Jeddah. Da Costa added back-to-back wins in Madrid. Nico Müller claimed his maiden victory in Berlin. Nyck de Vries and Oliver Rowland won in Monaco. Dennis dominated Sanya. That breadth of winners — across seven different teams — is unprecedented in the series’ history.

Furthermore, Evans’ 2025/26 season included a genuinely historic moment. His Miami victory broke the all-time Formula E race wins record, moving him past Sébastien Buemi’s previously shared record to become the sole holder of that mark. Coming into Shanghai, he was attempting to convert that landmark achievement into a fourth world title. However, the wet Shanghai weekend intervened with devastating consequence for his championship ambitions.


Frequently Asked Questions — Shanghai Formula E 2026

The most searched questions about the 2026 Shanghai E-Prix
What time does the Shanghai Formula E race start in 2026?
Both races have been amended due to adverse weather. The official amended race start times are 12:05 local (CST) on both Saturday July 4 (Round 12) and Sunday July 5 (Round 13). That converts to 05:05 BST, 06:05 CEST, 00:05 ET (midnight previous evening US East). The original start time was 15:05 local / 08:05 BST. Formula E confirmed the amendment on July 3, 2026.
Where is the Shanghai Formula E race held?
The 2026 Shanghai E-Prix is held at the Shanghai International Circuit in Anting, Shanghai, China. Formula E uses a shortened 3.051 km clockwise layout of the full 5.451 km circuit. The venue was designed by Hermann Tilke and opened in 2004 for the Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix. From above, the distinctive circuit shape resembles the Chinese character “上” (shang), meaning “up above.”
Who won Formula E Race 1 in Shanghai 2026?
Pascal Wehrlein (Porsche Formula E Team) won the 2026 Shanghai E-Prix Round 12 on Saturday July 4 in wet conditions. António Félix da Costa was second, Jake Dennis third, and Felipe Drugovich fourth. Championship leader Mitch Evans finished eighth. The victory moved Wehrlein into the championship lead for the first time in the 2025/26 season, overtaking Evans who subsequently failed to start Race 2.
How can I watch the Shanghai Formula E 2026 race?
The 2026 Shanghai E-Prix airs on TNT Sports in the UK and Ireland, Eurosport 1 in Europe (with L’Équipe in France), and through regional broadcasters in 200+ countries. The official Formula E website and app provide free Live Timing globally throughout every session. Check the official Formula E “How to Watch” page for your specific country’s broadcaster.
Who leads the Formula E championship after Shanghai 2026?
Pascal Wehrlein (Porsche) leads the 2025/26 Formula E Drivers’ Championship after the Shanghai double-header with 129 points — nine points ahead of Mitch Evans (120 points net lead). Evans had led the championship by 19 points entering the weekend but scored only 10 points across both Shanghai races while Wehrlein scored 37. António Félix da Costa, Jake Dennis, and Oliver Rowland are all within 20 points of the lead with four races remaining.
What is Attack Mode in Formula E?
Attack Mode is Formula E’s unique power boost system. Drivers activate it by steering off the normal racing line through a designated zone marked on the circuit. This activates a temporary increase in power output (typically 50 kW additional, for around four minutes). Each driver uses Attack Mode twice per race (in standard format weekends). The strategic timing of Attack Mode activation — whether to take it early, late, or during a safety car period — is one of the most important decisions drivers and engineers make during a race.
Why was the Shanghai Formula E schedule changed?
Formula E issued an official schedule amendment on July 3, 2026 after consistent rain and thunderstorms were forecast for both Saturday and Sunday of the Shanghai weekend. Together with the FIA, teams and manufacturers, the series moved both race start times from 15:05 local to 12:05 local, and brought qualifying forward to 08:00 local. FP2 and FP3 were moved behind closed doors to protect public running. Public gates opened at 07:30 on both race days. The official statement confirmed the goal was to maximise on-track time while prioritising fan, guest and personnel safety.
What is the Formula E Gen3 Evo car?
The Formula E Gen3 Evo is the current racing car used in the 2025/26 season. It produces up to 350 kW (approximately 470 bhp) in qualifying mode, weighs around 840 kg, and reaches speeds of up to 322 km/h. The car charges itself through regenerative braking — and in Pit Boost format, receives additional charge from a pit-lane charging unit. The Gen3 Evo is the fourth and final version of the Gen3 platform. Season 13 will debut the all-new Gen4 car, which Formula E plans to reveal publicly at the Goodwood Festival of Speed, July 9–12, 2026.

The bottom line from Shanghai

The 2026 Shanghai E-Prix delivered exactly the kind of championship revolution that makes the final stretch of a Formula E season genuinely unmissable. Wehrlein converted wet-weather mastery into a title lead. Evans went from 19-point leader to nine points behind — in a single double-header. Oliver Rowland, da Costa, Dennis, and Mortara are all still within striking distance of a first world title or a second.

Four races remain: two in Tokyo, two in London. The Gen3 Evo car races at two more venues before the Gen4 era begins. Every session between now and the London finale carries championship consequence. Pascal Wehrlein has the lead and the momentum. Mitch Evans has the experience of a three-time champion. The rest have nothing to lose.

This page will be updated with Race 2 results from Shanghai’s Round 13, Tokyo race reports, and the full championship picture as it develops through August. For live race coverage, head to FIAFormulaE.com/live.

Related Artical

Automatic vs manual — which is faster?

⚙️ Explained · Transmission Technology · Performance Automatic vs Manual: Which Is Actually Faster? The answer flipped completely about fifteen

What is a dual-clutch gearbox (DCT)?

⚙️ Explained · Transmission Engineering · Performance Basics What Is a Dual-Clutch Gearbox (DCT)? Two clutches, two gears already loaded,

Pocono Race Strategy
Pocono Race Strategy Breakdown: How the Tricky Triangle Is Won

🏁 NASCAR Analysis · Pocono Raceway · Strategy Pocono Race Strategy Breakdown:How the Tricky Triangle Is Won Fuel mileage, tire

CVT Transmission Explained: How It Works, Pros, Cons, and Reliability

⚙️ Explained · Transmission Tech · Drivetrain Basics CVT Transmission Explained — Pros, Cons & Reliability No gears. No shifts.

AWD vs RWD vs FWD — explained simply

⚙️ Explained · Drivetrain Mechanics · Buying Basics AWD vs RWD vs FWD — Explained Simply Three letters on a

How a clutch actually works

⚙️ Explained · Drivetrain Mechanics · Manual Transmission How a Clutch Actually Works It’s not just a pedal you press

Related News

NHRA Garage Talk
NHRA Garage Talk: Teams Facing the Most Pressure Before the Countdown

🏁 NHRA · Garage Talk · Countdown 2026 NHRA Garage Talk: Teams Facing the Most Pressure Before the Countdown The

NASCAR Silly Season
NASCAR Silly Season 2027: Early Driver Market Rumors, Confirmed Moves & Predictions

🏁 NASCAR Analysis · Silly Season 2027 · Driver Market NASCAR Silly Season 2027: Early Driver Market Rumors, Confirmed Moves

Ferrari's Next F1 Engine
Ferrari’s Next F1 Engine Upgrade Explained:What It Means for the 2026 Title Fight

🔴 F1 News · Ferrari · Power Unit Ferrari’s Next F1 Engine Upgrade Explained:What It Means for the 2026 Title

Kyle Kirkwood
Kyle Kirkwood Sends IndyCar Warning After Topping Mid-Ohio Test

🔴 IndyCar · Mid-Ohio Test · 2026 Kyle Kirkwood Sends IndyCar WarningAfter Topping Mid-Ohio Test The Andretti Global driver posted

San Diego NASCAR Street Race
San Diego NASCAR Street Race: Full Chaos Recap

🔴 Race Recap · NASCAR San Diego NASCAR Street Race:Full Chaos Recap Corey Heim became the first Cup Series winner

NASCAR Brings Chicagoland Speedway Back
NASCAR Brings Chicagoland Speedway Back:Here’s Exactly Why

🔴 NASCAR News · Schedule NASCAR Brings Chicagoland Speedway Back:Here’s Exactly Why After a seven-year absence, the 1.5-mile oval in