The 33-year-old Swiss played and won more matches than anyone else on the men's tour last year and has already given himself a punishing schedule at the start of the new campaign.
Less than 18 hours after winning the Brisbane International, where his victory in last Sunday's final was the 1000th match win of his career, Federer was dashing around Sydney Harbour in a speedboat in a promotion for the "Fast4 Tennis" exhibition he played later that evening.
Even at the end of another demanding day, Federer looked fresh and at ease as he wound down in a hospitality room at Sydney's Qantas Credit Union Arena.
Nevertheless, in looking ahead to his Australian Open preparations he admitted that he needed "to relax a little bit" and would "for sure take a couple of days off". He added: "It's really important to recover now rather than practise, because the game's there."
By Thursday, however, Federer was back on court practising for his 16th consecutive appearance at the Australian Open.
Federer has enjoyed more consistent success in Melbourne than at any other Grand Slam tournament, having reached the semifinals or better on his last 11 visits. "Usually I've played great at the Australian Open," he said. "I've usually felt pretty good and confident going in because I often had good finishes to the previous season.
"Last year was different because I had come off a tough 2013. I had a new racket, Stefan Edberg had joined the team and [I had had problems with my] back. In the end I played much better than I thought I would be able to. So I feel better going into the tournament this year, though that doesn't mean a thing. For all the guys [everything] starts from scratch."
Federer is pleased to be going into the tournament with his 1000th victory behind him, as there had been much talk about the approaching milestone. He is only the third player to have recorded 1000 match wins at tour level after Jimmy Connors (1253) and Ivan Lendl (1071).
He described 1000 as "a crazy number". He still has clear memories of win No 1, which came in Toulouse in September 1998 against France's Guillaume Raoux, who, as the world No 45, was ranked 843 places above his 17-year-old opponent. It was Federer's second tournament on the main tour and followed his first-round defeat to Argentina's Lucas Arnold Ker on his debut in Gstaad two months earlier.
"I remember it quite vividly," Federer said. "I qualified in Toulouse in 1998 and played Guillaume Raoux in the first round. He had come from playing in the Davis Cup in Israel. I remember he was totally tired. I had played great in qualifying and I beat him 6-2, 6-2. He looked so tired and I totally took advantage of it."
As for the future, Federer expects the Big Four - himself, Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray - to remain a force this year, despite the breakthroughs made by the likes of Marin Cilic, Kei Nishikori and Milos Raonic in 2014.
"It's not because we didn't play well that we maybe dropped a bit," Federer said on behalf of the old guard. "We have had some injuries. Rafa had his issues, Murray had surgery on his back, I had a tough year in 2013. The only guy who was really consistent was Novak." Independent