The holidays are over and Formula 1 world champion Lewis Hamilton faces a new start as the second half of the season revs up at Belgium's Spa-Francorchamps circuit this weekend.
The rules have been tweaked, meaning drivers on the starting grid can no longer be assisted over the radio by data-crunching engineers to find the optimum clutch settings that will ensure the quickest getaway.
Hamilton, 21 points clear of Mercedes team mate Nico Rosberg after 10 of 19 races, has had three poor starts in a row despite all being from pole position and the big question is what difference the change will make.
Another failure in Spa, where the Mercedes drivers started on the front row last year but collided on lap two, would only make the Briton's bosses more jittery after neither finished on the podium in Hungary in July.
Mercedes motorsport boss Toto Wolff warned this week that the team must stay focused.
"There is never a moment you can take your foot off the gas and Hungary proved once again that any slip is an opportunity our rivals will grab with both hands," he said.
After hanging out with movie and music celebrities, as well as his dogs Roscoe and Coco, in Barbados, New York and The Hamptons over the August break, Hamilton is raring to get back on track.
But he recognised after Hungary, where he finished only sixth while Rosberg was eighth, that the championship could be entering choppy waters -- particularly at Spa where rain is regularly a factor.
"I expect more unpredictable starts," Hamilton said then. "I imagine it is going to get worse, but that's racing."
The key difference is that the clutch 'bite' point, hitherto adjusted by engineers after assessing temperatures and track conditions, will be fixed from the moment the cars leave the pit lane.
The drivers will then have to determine for themselves the ideal point at which to release the paddles and accelerate away without triggering a loss of traction and wheelspin.
Rosberg, who won last season's pole trophy but has been outqualified 9-1 by Hamilton this year, can sense an opportunity.
"There will be more variables and it will be more difficult to predict," he said. "I like it because it gives me the opportunity to try and beat Lewis in that area. Until now it's been difficult because it was not really in the driver's hands."
The German qualified on pole in Belgium last year but the race, on the longest circuit on the calendar, was won by Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo.
Hamilton, who retired while then-championship leader Rosberg finished second, accused his team mate of hitting him on purpose "to prove a point" in a controversy that proved a turning point in the season.
The fired-up Briton won the next five races and ultimately his second title.
"It's been good to take a break from racing and spend some time relaxing, training and recharging the batteries. But, of course, there's always that flame in the back of your mind that just wants to get back out there and get on it," he said ahead of his return to the Ardennes.
"Spa is a great track to kick off the second part of the season...I love this track and I'll be gunning for that top spot again."
Rosberg, winner of three races to Hamilton's five with Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel taking the other two, said everything was still to play for.
Ferrari will be in the hunt again but Williams also fancy their chances of returning to the podium after failing to score in Hungary.
"The layout is normally strongly suited to the characteristics of our car, so I head to this weekend looking for a strong result," said Finland's Valtteri Bottas.
Belgian Grand Prix Stats & Facts
- Mercedes have had six one-two finishes this season and won eight of 10 races so far. Double world champion Lewis Hamilton has won five of them.
- Four-times champion Sebastian Vettel has 41 career wins, Hamilton is on 38 and Fernando Alonso 32. Kimi Raikkonen has won 20 races, Jenson Button 15 and Rosberg 11.
- Ferrari have won 223 races, McLaren 182, Williams 114 and Red Bull 50. Mercedes have won 37.
- McLaren have not won for 48 races, a run that dates back to Brazil 2012. They also went 48 races without a win from 1993-97.
- Mercedes have been on pole for the last 21 races. The record for successive poles is 24 (Williams 1992-93).
- Hamilton has been on pole in nine of the 10 races this season, two more than he took all last year, and can clinch the pole trophy this weekend. Rosberg was on pole in Spain. Hamilton has 47 career poles, Rosberg 16.
- Rosberg took 11 poles last year, when Mercedes and Williams were the only teams to start on pole. The last non-Mercedes pole was Austria, 2014.
- Ferrari's last pole was in Germany with Alonso in 2012.
- Eight drivers from four teams have appeared on the podium this season -- Hamilton, Rosberg (Mercedes), Vettel, Raikkonen (Ferrari), Valtteri Bottas, Felipe Massa (Williams), Daniil Kvyat and Daniel Ricciardo (Red Bull).
- Hamilton, Rosberg and Vettel have shared the podium in six of the races.
- Hamilton's run of 16 successive podium finishes ended in Hungary last month, along with his hopes of matching Michael Schumacher's record of 19 this season. Mercedes also ended their run of 28 successive podium appearances.
- Rosberg has 34 career podiums. Hamilton 79, one short of Ayrton Senna.
- Hamilton leads Rosberg by 21 points.
- Vettel has been in the points for 21 successive races. The record of 27 is held by Ferrari team mate Raikkonen.
- The two Manor Marussia drivers, Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi, are the only ones yet to score.
- Spa is the longest lap of the season and one of the fastest, with an average speed of around 230kph. Cars are flat out for about 70 percent of the time, making it the hardest circuit of the year for engines.
- The circuit has hosted 47 of the 59 Belgian GPs to date.
- Michael Schumacher won six times at Spa, more than any driver. Raikkonen has four wins there.
- There are no Formula One drivers racing with a Belgian licence at present, although Dutch teenager Max Verstappen is Belgian-born, has a Belgian mother and lives in Belgium.
- Ferrari and McLaren have both won 12 times at Spa. Red Bull have won the last two races there and three of the last four.
- Only five of the last 13 races at Spa have been won from pole position.
- Six of the current drivers have won at Spa: Button (2012), Vettel (2011 and 2013), Hamilton (2010), Raikkonen (2004, 2005, 2007 and 2009), Massa (2008) and Ricciardo (2014).
- After his victory in Hungary, Vettel is now level with the late Brazilian triple world champion Ayrton Senna in third place on the all-time list of race winners. Only Schumacher (91) and Alain Prost (51) have more.
- Hamilton's record of leading at least one lap of the last 18 races ended in Hungary. The Mercedes run of 28 successive races led also came to an end.