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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Mercedes‑Benz starts large‑scale production of electric axial flux motor in Berlin‑Marienfelde

 


  • Revolutionary Mercedes-Benz drive system developed in Berlin-Marienfelde
  • High-tech manufacturing: 35 processes that are new worldwide and more than 30 patent applications
  • Production across around 30,000 square meters in three halls and seven production lines
  • Highly innovative axial flux motors are used for the first time in the new high-performance model, 
     the Mercedes-AMG GT 4-Door Coupe

 

Aerial view of the Mercedes-Benz site in Berlin-Marienfelde.

Mercedes-Benz has commenced large-scale production of its new electric axial flux motor at its Berlin-Marienfelde plant. With the launch of large-scale production of this revolutionary drive system from Mercedes-Benz, the company’s oldest manufacturing site is opening a new chapter in its history spanning more than 120 years. The compact high-performance motor is celebrating its world debut in a production vehicle in the new Mercedes-AMG GT 4-door Coupe. Founded in 1902, the Berlin-Marienfelde plant has been part of the global powertrain production network for decades. Since 2022, it has also been home to the Mercedes-Benz Digital Factory Campus. Mercedes-Benz is now establishing the site as a center of excellence for the manufacture of high-performance electric motors. 

“With the start of large‑scale series production of the axial flux motor in Berlin‑Marienfelde, we are bringing a pioneering innovation for electromobility into industrial reality. In doing so, we are sending a strong signal of technological leadership, operational excellence and the transformation of the automotive industry in Germany. My special thanks go to the team that made this highly technical and complex project possible with passion, precision, and great pioneering spirit.” 
Michael Schiebe, Member of the Board of Management of Mercedes-Benz Group AG, 
 responsible for Production, Quality & Supply Chain Management 

“Mastering the demanding axial flux technology is a major opportunity for the German and European automotive industry. This innovative electric motor helps establish a strong foothold in the premium segment. The start of production of the axial flux motor in Berlin-Marienfelde sends a powerful signal about Germany’s strength as an industrial location. With Mercedes-Benz’s axial flux motor, electromobility gains additional momentum. A decisive factor in the continued success of e-mobility is the availability of charging infrastructure. Through our Charging Infrastructure Master Plan 2030, we support both the considerable commitment of the charging infrastructure industry and the efforts of the automotive industry.” 
Patrick Schnieder, German Federal Minister of Transport

„The production launch of this new, cutting-edge axial flux motor marks the beginning of a new chapter for innovative vehicle technology, industrial value creation and the transformation of mobility. Berlin needs success stories like this. These inspire confidence in change, secure jobs and strengthen our position in international competition. The good news today is that Marienfelde is a location steeped in tradition that is shaping the future through technological excellence.“ 
Ute Bonde, Senator for Urban Mobility, Transport, Climate Action and the Environment for the state of Berlin

Mercedes-AMG GT 63 4-Door Coupe | combined energy consumption: 21.0-17.9 kWh/100 km | combined CO₂ emissions: 0 g/km | CO₂ class: A1

Mercedes-AMG GT 55 4-Door Coupe | combined energy consumption: 21.0-17.8 kWh/100 km | combined CO₂ emissions: 0 g/km | CO₂ class: A1

 

By starting the large‑scale series production of the axial flux motor, a technological vision is becoming industrial reality. What was long considered barely feasible due to its complexity is now being manufactured in large series in Berlin‑Marienfelde. In total, production comprises 98 process steps. Sixty‑five of these are being used for the first time at Mercedes‑Benz, while 35 processes are new worldwide. The technologies developed for this purpose have resulted in more than 30 patent applications. Across around 30,000 square meters of production space, in three halls and on seven production lines, Mercedes‑Benz combines highly automated manufacturing processes, laser technology, intelligent control systems, AI‑based quality control and the expertise of highly skilled employees. 

From vision to large‑scale production

The start of large‑scale series production of the axial flux motor places exceptional demands on precision, process reliability and automation. The motor’s compact design and high-power density require manufacturing methods that were newly developed specifically for this application and industrialized for large‑scale production. 

One example is the manufacture of the copper coils. To achieve the high-power density of the axial flux motor, rectangular copper wire is used in the stator, among other elements. This allows more copper to be installed in the same installation space than with round wire. However, the wire must be bent at high speed into tight radii without forming creases, damaging the insulation or reducing the cross‑section. 
Mercedes‑Benz has developed in cooperation with partners a special process for this purpose that combines maximum precision with industrial cycle capability. 

The interconnection of the coil packages in the stator is also technologically demanding. Each coil end must be connected to the corresponding interconnection wire within a very confined installation space – without causing thermal damage to adjacent plastic structures. The solution is a highly precise laser connection of the copper wires. This enables minimal energy input at the welding point while maintaining a very short process time. 

Highly precise laser polymer welding

Another example of precision‑critical manufacturing processes is polymer welding. Simultaneous laser transmission welding of plastic components in the drivetrain requires the highest level of geometric accuracy and minimally invasive energy input in order to avoid damage to the surrounding areas. AI‑supported optical real‑time quality control documents the joint immediately and thus supports process reliability. During the conditioning of joining partners, AI‑based image processing detects the exact position of a component, places virtual protection zones over sensitive areas and ensures that the laser precisely processes only the intended surfaces. The components joined in this way are both oil‑pressure‑tight and capable of withstanding high mechanical loads.  

Highly precise final assembly

The final assembly, known internally as the “wedding”, is particularly impressive. During this process, the stator is positioned between two rotor discs fitted with magnets and permanently joined. Magnetic forces of up to 9 kN (kilonewtons) – equivalent to around 900 kilograms – act on the components. At the same time, the stator must remain within the magnetic center plane with a tolerance of less than 0.1 millimeters. An innovative control algorithm corrects the position in the final 0.5 seconds of the process using high‑frequency control impulses. What matters here is not force alone, but intelligent control, sensitive sensor technology and precise process management. 

The axial flux motor: maximum performance in the smallest possible space

The British electric motor specialist YASA built upon the fundamental principle of the axial flux motor and developed an innovative prototype on which the current motor is based. Since YASA became a wholly owned subsidiary of Mercedes‑Benz AG in 2021, Mercedes‑Benz has consistently further developed the technology. This applies to both the product itself and the production process in order for both to meet the requirements of automotive mass production, high performance, and continuous load capability. One example: The axial flux motor on the front axle reaches speeds of more than 15,000 revolutions per minute.   

In contrast to conventional radial flux motors, the electromagnetic flux in an axial flux motor runs parallel to the axis of rotation. The key components are arranged in a disc‑shaped layout: two rotors sandwich the stator from the left and right. This design enables an especially compact motor architecture, high power and torque density, and new freedoms in drivetrain packaging. In the new Mercedes‑AMG GT 4‑Door Coupe, the motor at the front axle is just under nine centimetres wide; the two motors at the rear axle each measure around eight centimetres in width. The three axial flux motors are integrated per axle into so‑called High Performance Electric Drive Units (HP.EDU), where they are combined with a compact input planetary gearbox in a single housing. 

The new Mercedes‑AMG GT 4‑Door Coupe clearly demonstrates the performance potential of this technology. The all‑electric performance model accelerates from 0 to 100 km/h in as little as 2.1 seconds and reaches a top speed of 300 km/h with the Driver’s Package. Its capabilities were also demonstrated the previous year by a spectacular record run in Nardò with the technology demonstrator CONCEPT AMG GT XX: over seven days and 13 hours, it covered more than 40,000 kilometers and set 25 long‑distance records. 

Digital Factory Campus as an innovation engine

The start of large‑scale series production of the axial flux motor is closely linked to the strategic further development of the Berlin‑Marienfelde site. With the Mercedes‑Benz Digital Factory Campus, the plant has assumed a central role in the digitalization of production within the global Mercedes‑Benz production network since 2022. The campus serves as a real production environment for the development and testing of digital applications based on the MO360 production ecosystem. 

With the industrialization of the axial flux motor, Berlin‑Marienfelde brings together key future fields: high‑performance electric drive systems, digital production and intelligent automation. As the oldest producing Mercedes‑Benz site, it is thus taking on a central role in transferring new technologies into scalable, quality‑assured large‑scale production processes.

M-B Preview of Barcelona-Catalunya F! Grand Prix

 



Toto Talks Barcelona-Catalunya

Barcelona is a more traditional, and therefore representative, circuit; it's a real test of a car. It has a long straight and a mix of high, medium, and low-speed corners, so after two Sprint weekends and Monaco, it should give us a better read on our performance. It will be the first weekend where we can understand more clearly our recent updates and where we sit relative to the rest of the field. We need to see how the car behaves, whether the performance is there, and whether we can extract it. Until then, we should be careful not to draw too many conclusions from recent races.

Kimi will naturally take confidence from Monaco, but the focus has to be on continuing to build and doing the job in Barcelona. For George, the last races have not gone his way, but that is part of racing. He is very strong mentally, we know the level he can deliver, and he has the right people around him. The objective is simple: reset, focus on the weekend ahead, and put together the performance we know he is capable of.

Fred will also drive Kimi’s car in FP1. He has been an important part of our development work with the W17 and in helping us understand how to unlock more from the package. This session is a good opportunity for him to connect that simulator work with the real car, and for us to gather another useful data point as we keep working to improve.

Third Driver Insights

Barcelona is a very familiar track. We first ran these new cars there back in January, so it will be interesting to return after the first five months of racing and see how much performance we’ve unlocked.

It’s a high-speed, technical circuit with a mix of fast and slow corners, which always makes finding the right setup quite challenging. Tire management will also be key, especially on the rear tires, which tend to take a lot of energy.

I’ll be driving in FP1, so I’m very excited to get my first taste of the W17. It is something I’ve been waiting for since the beginning of the year. I’ll also be working closely with the team throughout the weekend.

Did you know?

  • This weekend marks George’s 100th Grand Prix driving for the Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team – his first came at the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix.
  • This year marks the last year that the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya retains a permanent place on the calendar; moving forward it will be in a rotational system with the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps.
  • Most of the track’s low-speed turns are left-handers and most of the right-handers are taken at high speeds.  This poses a challenge for setting up the car, with asymmetric setups an option. That track characteristic also means the left tyres wear out quicker, while the right tires experience lower temperatures.
  • 24 of the 34 races that have taken place at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya have been won from pole.
  • Barcelona first appeared on the calendar in 1991 and has hosted the Spanish Grand Prix in every season since until this year, where the Spanish Grand Prix is hosted in Madrid.
  • Lewis Hamilton recorded his 100th pole position at the 2021 Spanish Grand Prix while driving for the team.
  • Lewis Hamilton holds the record for most consecutive wins at a Grand Prix circuit with five in Barcelona (2017-2021). He shares this record with Ayrton Senna and Monaco (1989-1993).

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Kimi Makes History at Monaco GP



  • Kimi became the youngest Monaco Grand Prix winner in history as he took victory on the streets of the principality on Sunday afternoon.
  • George came home out of the points in P12 after having to serve a drive-through penalty in the closing laps with the field bunched up following a red flag.
  • Both drivers started on the medium compound and were running a conventional one-stop, switching to the Hard tire. 
  • Kimi had the race under control at the front whilst George pulled off the undercut on the Red Bull of Isack Hadjar to take net P4 at his first stop.
  • George picked up a five-second time penalty for speeding in the pitlane but this was en route to being irrelevant as he had a comfortable gap and the race headed to a calm conclusion.
  • That came to an end when Lance Stroll hit the barrier at the final corner and the Safety Car was deployed.
  • After missing the opportunity to pit first time around, both cars stopped at the next opportunity but the team failed to serve George’s penalty correctly; that led to a stop-go penalty.
  • After Charles Leclerc also crashed on the restart, the red flag flew and George would be punished severely when taking his penalty once the race resumed.
  • Kimi, now on used soft tires, managed the standing start well and calmly brought his car home to take victory.
  • George meanwhile served his penalty and emerged in P14, gaining a few positions due to time penalties to be classified P12 ultimately. 
  • Kimi, at 19 years, 9 months, and 13 days old, becomes the youngest Monaco GP winner in history.
  • He also takes the team’s first victory in Monte Carlo since 2019 where Lewis Hamilton claimed an emotional victory following the recent passing of Niki Lauda. 
  • Toto Wolff, Team Principal, CEO, and Co-Owner, represented the team on the podium.
  • Kimi Antonelli

    It’s an incredible feeling to win in Monaco. It’s such a special weekend and one I’ll remember for a long time. Today was one of those days where everything just clicked; I had a lot of confidence in the car, felt strong throughout, and to bring the win home in a place like this makes it even more meaningful.

    From a race perspective, there were definitely some key moments to manage. The starts are still an area we’re working on, but I’ve made good progress. My first one was solid, and although the second was a bit more challenging with the tyres, it’s positive to see improvement. 

    The red flag added a bit of stress, especially knowing the restart could change everything, but we handled it well. In the final laps, I really enjoyed myself out there, even though I still had to carefully manage the tires. This track demands a lot of focus, you have to find the right balance between pushing and not making mistakes, and once you settle into that rhythm, everything starts to come together.

    At the same time, I know there’s still a lot to learn and improve. I just want to keep pushing, keep building on this momentum, and most importantly, keep enjoying the journey. That’s what makes moments like this so rewarding.

    George Russell

    Firstly, congratulations to Kimi. He did an amazing job today and over the weekend and is a well-deserving winner. On my side, the race was very difficult. I had managed to get to P4 but the penalty for speeding in the pitlane is difficult to understand. I was under the limit but then that was compounded by us not serving the penalty at my second stop; that ultimately cost me a lot and left me with zero points again.

    It’s tough to take but I’m not going to give up. Across the last two races, I’ve effectively lost around 40 points. It’s incredibly frustrating but the rest of the season can still look very different. We saw that last year and, in many seasons previous. It’s unfortunate how things have played out so far but I’m aiming to bounce back in Barcelona. I believe in myself and I know what I’m capable of.

    Toto Wolff, CEO & Team Principal

    Kimi delivered a very controlled race from start to finish today. It was a clean start, strong pace, and above all, very mature driving. It’s exactly what you want to see, and he was a well-deserving winner. Congratulations to him and the team.

    On George’s side, he had done a good job to get back into the battle for the podium but was unfortunate to receive a pitlane speeding penalty. That undid his race unfortunately and the subsequent drive-through penalty for not serving the penalty correctly ended with him out of the points. He has not felt fully confident in the car this weekend and that is on us as a team. We win and lose together, and this is something we will learn from and help him recover from.

    In terms of the bigger picture, we’re not talking about the championship at this stage. There are still many races to go, and while it’s been a positive start overall, we’ll take it step-by- step and see where we stand as the season develops. 

    Andrew Shovlin, Trackside Engineering Director

    Congratulations to Kimi and the team. Winning in Monaco is always a special feeling and one that never comes easy. He had strong pace throughout and allowed us to control an unpredictable and difficult race. 

    George had an unfortunate weekend where few things went his way. He had done a good job to get into a position where he would have been fighting for a podium, however his race unraveled after receiving a penalty for speeding in the pitlane. The timing of the Safety Car posed a challenge to the team to co-ordinate the double stack with little time to react. Having failed to correctly serve the penalty at his second stop, George was handed a drive-through penalty. After the red flag had brought the field together, it turned what would have been a couple of positions dropped into finishing outside of the points. We will analyze our communication and processes to become more resilient to similar situations in future.

    Whilst we leave here with mixed feelings, we can be content with the work done to produce a car that is capable of winning at a unique circuit like this where we have struggled in recent years. We now move on to Barcelona and a very different track; we will be doing everything we can to carry on this run of form. 
     


  • Formula One - Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team, 2026 Monaco GP. Kimi Antonelli

Saturday M-B Report from Monte Carlo F1 Grand Prix

Formula One - Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team, 2026 Monaco GP. Kimi Antonelli
 


Pole position for Kimi in Monaco

  • Kimi Antonelli took pole position for tomorrow’s Monaco Grand Prix with team-mate George Russell qualifying P6.
  • It is the team’s first pole in Monaco since Lewis Hamilton qualified fastest in 2019.
  • Pole was something of a surprise given the pace of the Ferraris on Friday, but overnight work led to set-up changes that helped get the car in a better place. 
  • That delivered an improved performance in FP3 with Kimi topping the timing screens and George ending the final hour of practice in P4.
  • Qualifying proved to be a tense affair with contenders for pole showing at various points including Ferrari, Red Bull, and McLaren along with ourselves.
  • The key to unlocking the lap time was getting the right out-lap and prep-lap profile; after taking provisional pole on his first effort, Kimi needed to improve on his last effort and did so to take P1 by 0.043s from the Red Bull of Max Verstappen. 
  • George put in a valiant effort despite having a harder time of getting the tyres working fully to go P6 behind the two Ferraris of Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc, and the second Red Bull of Isack Hadjar. 
  • Kimi Antonelli

    Pole position in Monaco is an incredible result. The team did an amazing job to get the car in a good place, particularly with the improvements we made overnight after a difficult Friday. It was such a tight fight out there with so many other cars and drivers that looked capable of taking P1. I am delighted to come away with pole therefore and I’m already looking forward to tomorrow.

    Qualifying wasn’t completely straightforward at the start. The car felt a bit on edge but as the session went on, everything started to come together. We made the right adjustments, and I felt much more comfortable with where the car was by the time we got to Q3. That gave me the confidence to really push when it mattered.

    That final segment of the session was extremely tense and you never quite know what to expect. Finding those last few tenths is never easy, especially with Max (Verstappen) so close all the way through. It really came down to nailing the lap at the right moment and I’m very pleased we were able to do that.

    To be on pole here means a lot, but at the same time, it’s only the first step. I know who’s around me on the grid, and I’m sure they’ll be putting on the pressure from the very start. The focus now is on getting a strong launch and managing the race from there. We’ve shown good pace all weekend, which gives me confidence, but Monaco is always unpredictable. I’ll try to stay calm, make the most of the opportunity, and see what we can achieve tomorrow.

    George Russell

    This has been a very challenging weekend for me so far and that continued into qualifying. It has been a bit of a weakness of mine recently and unfortunately it didn’t click this weekend. There were a few good laps across the hour, and FP3 had been promising, but those moments were too few and far between. You need full confidence in the grip level you are getting, particularly around here, and I didn’t quite have that.

    It’s been a frustrating run for me recently and I need to understand why I am struggling to get the tyres working in the way they need to be. Clearly something in my driving style isn’t helping deliver what I need to; it worked well last year but these new generations of car may need something slightly different. I don’t have a clear answer just yet but will work hard with the team to get on top of it. 

    Looking ahead to tomorrow, it could be a long afternoon starting from P6. That said, it’s Monaco and anything can happen so we will stay optimistic and see what we can do.

    Toto Wolff, CEO & Team Principal

    That was an exciting qualifying session and a fantastic lap by Kimi to take pole position. There were many challengers, including the Ferraris and the Red Bulls, but Kimi found something extra when it mattered and delivered with full commitment. It’s been seven years since we’ve been on pole position here and historically, we’ve not been very strong in Monaco. That makes today’s result even more special.

    On George’s side, he has just not been as comfortable in the car this weekend. He has not felt the grip and therefore not had the confidence to push as much as you need to. That is particularly challenging in Monaco where confidence is one of the most important factors for unlocking lap time. We know the ability he has though and it is only a matter of time before he bounces back. He has a great group of people around him and everyone is fully behind him. We’re supporting him every step of the way, and we’re confident he’ll come back stronger.

    Andrew Shovlin, Trackside Engineering Director

    Well done to Kimi and the team on a well-deserved Monaco pole position. It is by far the hardest session of the year to navigate but he did a great job of building sensibly throughout and then saving the best until last with a brilliant final lap. 

    After our struggles on Friday, we had engineers working overnight on the simulator and they found a useful direction that gave the car a bit more stability and predictability. FP3 started well and George was immediately on the pace. Soon both drivers were setting decent lap times and reporting that the balance had improved. We therefore did very little to the cars going into qualifying. 

    On the early laps, both struggled with the circuit having lost a bit of grip and we had a generally messy balance. As the track improved, so did the car for Kimi and by the latter stages he looked like he was in the mix. Unfortunately for George it was an uphill struggle with the tyres never feeling like they were really biting. We're trying to understand why such similar set-ups yielded such different feeling for the two drivers and will work through that in the days to come.

    For now, we need to turn our attentions to the race tomorrow. Starting from pole is only the first step to achieving a good result at Monaco. It's always a long and unpredictable race and there are many situations that we need to protect against if we can win tomorrow. Clearly the goal will be to move George up the field and keep Kimi where he is, but in Monaco that's often easier said than done.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

US Stolen Car Statistics, 2015 - 2024

It has been quite an epidemic here in Dayton, Ohio of late -- just my anecdotal sense of things, from local news reports.  A reflection of a major problem with youth, a flagrant disregard for personal property and the law, and a search for thrills in a world slowly unravelling before our eyes. Yes, car theft has always been a problem, but not at this level and not with such a proliferation of guns in the hands of young people.  At the suburbs do not bring immunity to this act.

U.S. Auto Theft Statistics, 2015–2024

Below are reported U.S. motor vehicle theft cases for the most recent ten-year period available, using FBI-based data compiled by Statista; rates are thefts per 100,000 population. 1 2 The 2021 figure should be interpreted carefully because the FBI noted that 2021 estimates were primarily NIBRS submissions plus nominal SRS data and were below a statistically acceptable level for national comparability. 1 2

YearReported motor vehicle theftsTheft rate per 100,000 peopleYear-over-year change
2015710,265221.0
2016769,788238.2+8.4%
2017768,860236.0-0.1%
2018761,434232.7-1.0%
2019725,198220.9-4.8%
2020817,486248.1+12.7%
2021801,471241.5-2.0%
2022948,119284.5+18.3%
20231,082,010321.3+14.1%
2024880,327258.8-18.6%

The ten-year total for 2015–2024 was approximately 8.26 million reported motor vehicle thefts, calculated from the annual FBI-based case counts above. 1 The highest year in this period was 2023, with 1,082,010 reported cases and a rate of 321.3 per 100,000 people. 1 2 The lowest year in this period was 2015, with 710,265 reported cases and a rate of 221.0 per 100,000 people. 1 2 From 2015 to 2024, reported thefts increased by about 24%, based on the change from 710,265 to 880,327 cases. 1

Key Takeaways

Auto thefts rose sharply after 2019, increasing from 725,198 reported cases in 2019 to 1,082,010 in 2023. 1 The 2023 level was the peak of the ten-year period and represented the only year in this table above one million reported motor vehicle theft cases. 1 In 2024, reported cases fell to 880,327, a decrease of about 18.6% from 2023. 1

A separate NICB release reported 850,708 vehicles stolen nationwide in 2024, down from 1,020,729 in 2023, and described the 2024 decline as the largest annual decrease in stolen vehicles in 40 years. 3 The NICB series differs somewhat from the FBI-reported case series, so it is best used as a related but not identical measure of vehicle theft activity. 3 1





Why pick up trucks?  Are they easier to steal?

Most-Stolen Vehicles by Year, U.S., 2015–2024

YearMost-stolen vehicle/modelReported theftsNotes
2015Honda Accord52,244NICB listed the 1996 Honda Accord as the most-stolen vehicle/model-year combination in 2015. 1
2016Honda Accord50,427NICB reported the Honda Accord as the most-stolen vehicle in 2016, with the 1997 model year most often stolen. 5
2017Honda Civic45,062NICB reported the Honda Civic as the most-stolen vehicle in 2017, with the 1998 model year most often stolen. 6
2018Honda Civic38,426NICB reported the Honda Civic as the most-stolen vehicle in 2018, with the 2000 model year most often stolen. 7
2019Ford full-size pickup38,938NICB reported the Ford full-size pickup as the most-stolen vehicle in 2019, replacing the Honda Civic at the top. 8
2020Ford full-size pickup44,014NICB reported the Ford full-size pickup as the most-stolen vehicle in 2020. 9
2021Chevrolet full-size pickup48,206NICB-based reporting showed Chevrolet full-size pickups ranked first in 2021, narrowly ahead of Ford full-size pickups. 10
2022Chevrolet full-size pickup49,903NICB reported Chevrolet full-size pickups as the most-stolen vehicle in 2022. 11
2023Hyundai Elantra48,445NICB reported the Hyundai Elantra as the most-stolen vehicle in 2023, as Hyundai/Kia thefts surged. 2
2024Hyundai Elantra31,712NICB reported the Hyundai Elantra as the most-stolen vehicle in 2024. 12

Main Pattern

From 2015–2018, older Honda Accord and Honda Civic models dominated the national most-stolen list. 1 5 6 7 From 2019–2022, full-size Ford and Chevrolet pickups became the leading theft targets. 8 9 10 11 In 2023–2024, Hyundai and Kia models, especially the Hyundai Elantra and Hyundai Sonata, rose sharply in the rankings. 2 12

Least-Stolen Vehicles / Lowest Theft Risk

There is not a single official annual NICB list of the “least stolen” vehicles for every year from 2015–2024 in the same format as the most-stolen list. 1 2 The best available “least stolen” evidence comes from HLDI-style insurance loss data, which compares theft claims relative to how many insured vehicles are on the road. 3 4

Lowest-theft-risk vehicle or categoryEvidence
Tesla Model 3 4WDListed among vehicles with near-zero whole-vehicle theft claims in HLDI-based reporting. 3
Tesla Model 3 2WDListed among the least-stolen vehicles in HLDI-based reporting. 3
Tesla Model Y 4WDListed among the least-stolen vehicles in HLDI-based reporting. 3
Toyota RAV4 Prime 4WDReported by HLDI coverage as one of the least-stolen vehicles, ranking fourth in a 2022–2024 analysis summarized by Minq. 4
Tesla Model S 4WDReported by HLDI coverage as one of the least-stolen vehicles, ranking fifth in a 2022–2024 analysis summarized by Minq. 4
Electric vehicles broadlyHLDI-based reporting found electric vehicles were prominent among the least-stolen vehicles, partly because they are often garaged, connected, trackable, and harder to resell after theft. 3 4
Station wagons and minivans as categoriesHLDI-based reporting described station wagons and minivans as among the lowest-theft vehicle classes. 3

Friday, June 5, 2026

Monaco F1 Grand prix Update from Mercedes-Benz, Friday

 

Formula One - Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team, 2026 Monaco GP. George Russell

  • Track action got underway in Monte Carlo with two hours of practice on Friday ahead of this weekend’s Monaco Grand Prix. 
  • Both drivers used all three tire compounds across the day, with the Hard and the Medium used in FP1 and the Medium and the Soft in FP2. 
  • The drivers ran slightly different set-ups for FP1 but converged for FP2; that was reflected in the times with just one tenth separating George in P4 from Kimi in P5 during that second hour of running. 
  • Neither George nor Kimi felt that the car was in its optimal place with an imbalance of tire temperature across the axles and some instability in the middle sector. 
  • As expected ahead of the weekend, the Ferraris led the way in both sessions and look favorites to take pole position tomorrow. 
  • The team will work hard overnight and in FP3 tomorrow to find more time and aim to be in the fight for pole position tomorrow afternoon.

George Russell

We saw good improvements from FP1 to FP2 but if we want to be in the fight for pole and victory, we will have to take a similar step forward overnight. It is certainly shaping up to be the most challenging weekend of our season so far and tougher than we had hoped. Heading into today, we expected Ferrari to be at the front as they’ve typically been strong here. Its cars historically, particularly on the mechanical side, seem to suit these types of tracks. That is how today played out but it was surprising to see Red Bull so competitive too. We’ve got work to do to get in the mix; we have some ideas on where we can improve though, and we know there is more lap time to unlock. If we execute perfectly and commit 100%, then hopefully we can get there.

Kimi Antonelli

It was not the most straightforward Friday of the season. I struggled with the car, particularly in the middle sector and that was limiting our pace. We tried a lot of different set-up options and have gathered a lot of good data. That will help us evaluate what work to do overnight and what changes to make for FP3 and Qualifying. 

Ferrari look to be in a very strong position. We know they are typically good in Monaco, and they certainly seem to be favourites for tomorrow. We know there is more time for us to find though given we didn’t get the car in its perfect sweet spot yet, so hopefully we can take a step forward and be in the mix tomorrow. 

Andrew Shovlin, Trackside Engineering Director

It's a long time since we had a good weekend in Monaco, so we arrived here with modest expectations. We have worked hard on our preparation to try and land our start set-up in a decent place. We also were doing some cross car compares in FP1 to give ourselves plenty of data to work through. 

By FP2, we had landed both cars in a reasonable region, but our single lap pace was slightly off the Ferraris and the Red Bull of Max Verstappen. Encouragingly, we have a car that we can work with though and importantly can see some opportunity to make it quicker. We've certainly got to find a bit of pace if we want to be in the fight for the front row tomorrow, but we can take some encouragement from the fact that W17, on first impressions at least, seems a bit better suited to this track than its predecessors.