
Floor edge and outboard face of bargeboard upwashing detail



lol that diffuser side is completely openorganic wrote: ↑26 Jan 2026, 12:08Front brake duct/debris shield detailing
https://i.ibb.co/Q7Pr6Q0s/20260126-115832-2.jpg
Floor edge and outboard face of bargeboard upwashing detail
https://i.ibb.co/mVXnFKFZ/20260126-115832-1.jpg
Trailing the side headrest.vorticism wrote: ↑26 Jan 2026, 12:08First sidepod cannon exits we’ve seen this year. What I alluded to back in June.
https://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewt ... 1#p1293691


There's an allowance for it. Viewed from the side, the diffuser sidewall only has to exist within a small area (a polygon defined in the regs). Hence these gaps we've been seeing--an intentional allowance by the FIA. No loopholes here. The vertical element you see to the side of the diffuser hole is a wheel-mounted turning vane (a standard part common to all teams, similar to the previous regulations' various shared winglets). The diffuser can also be continuous with no cut-outs. That is also an option.
It's because the sidepod is very small. Almost half in width compared to the likes of Mercedes and Ferrari, and it's also almost completely "pressed-against" the body. This is basically a zero pod but with a horizontal inlet instead of vertical.
Or they have PTSD, and words like 'zero-pod' or minimal sidepods are prohibited in their factorymatt_b wrote: ↑26 Jan 2026, 13:46Need to see more angles but it looks like a Mercedes 2023 sidepod with a horizonal inlet rather than vertical one, their thinking must be that the minimal sidepod design can work to good effect under these reguilations. You would think Mercedes wouldve looked into this given the data they gathered over those years.
It's a zero pod done right!
Didn't the zero pod start out as an idea for the pre ground effect car, they just didn't get to it?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑26 Jan 2026, 14:12It's a zero pod done right!
I mean zero pod was not compatible with Ground effect floors but it might be a silver bullet in these regs!