TeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑04 Jan 2026, 19:25
Clearly the huge venturi floors produce more drag than a flat floor with a diffuser. Even if it is less relative drag than wings. And that is why the flat floor is back.
OK, initially you had disagreed that the underbody is more efficient in L/D than the wings, so we cleared that out I think. It is significant to note that 90s CART (when there was still chassis competition) kept their underbody venturi tunnels even when they were running basically no wing at all.
On the assertion that the flat floor is back because of the need to reduce drag, I havent found that anywhere, so it could be right or not, hard to know. It's no secret that the current cars are way too peaky, stiff and dependent on ride height and nobody likes to drive them, so IMO they took the opportunity fix that problem. Here's the-race when the 2026 car was oficially announced in july 06, 2024 (i haven't found any mention of flat floors in 2023):
"Floors will become partially flat and diffuser power will be neutered, reducing the ground effect and the reliance of the cars on ultra-stiff and low set-ups."
Now about AI:
when I ask chatgpt your exact question (Was the venturi floors removed from the 2026 F1 regulations because the new 50% electric power unit could not handle the drag ?), the answer is basically NO, but the text is pretty bad IMO:
"No, the Venturi floors were removed from the 2026 Formula 1 regulations not because the new 50% electric power unit couldn't handle the drag, but because the primary goal was to improve the overall safety and aerodynamic performance of the cars. The removal of the Venturi tunnels, which were part of the ground effect aerodynamic philosophy used in previous years, is connected to a broader shift in how downforce is generated and how airflow interacts with the rest of the car.
The Venturi tunnels are known for generating a large portion of downforce through ground effect, but they also created certain aerodynamic challenges. The main concerns were the stability and complexity of the airflow under the car, as well as their impact on the cars' behavior, particularly in high-speed corners and when following other cars closely (which is vital for improving racing and overtaking)."
Gemini says YES, but the sources they cite are a 1yr old reddit post in which nobody mentions drag at all(before somebody replied to various year old comments yesterday, funnily enough lol) and an official f1 article where the flat floors are presented as:
" This will mean less downforce and a higher ride height requirement that should lead to a greater variety of set-ups that suit a greater range of driving styles – thus levelling the playing field.", no mention of drag at all.
So the lesson here is that Gen AI is ---.