Aston Martin AMR26

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AR3-GP
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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ALO_Power
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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The fact that this car looks that pretty unpainted with raw carbon fiber, says a lot to me :mrgreen:

krich
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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Dont forget some reliable sources said there was 1 team that had a active aero by electronics and not hydraulics.. could be Aston

mzso
mzso
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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wiktor977 wrote:
29 Jan 2026, 23:51
This undercut is big and the sidepods themselves are very thin, it looks like Aston managed to keep the front tyre wake outboard without using big sidepods. This makes me almost 100% sure that this front wing and the nose are a dummy and the real one will look much different and more complex.

https://i.postimg.cc/cLFR3jh5/Aston-front.jpg
The nosecone's lines don't seem to even fit with the rest of the car. As if they pulled a larger nosecone over the normal one. And the fixed wings are clearly unreasonable.

The sidepods with these proportions look like very low aspect ratio wings.

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AR3-GP
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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mzso wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:07
wiktor977 wrote:
29 Jan 2026, 23:51
This undercut is big and the sidepods themselves are very thin, it looks like Aston managed to keep the front tyre wake outboard without using big sidepods. This makes me almost 100% sure that this front wing and the nose are a dummy and the real one will look much different and more complex.

https://i.postimg.cc/cLFR3jh5/Aston-front.jpg
The nosecone's lines don't seem to even fit with the rest of the car. As if they pulled a larger nosecone over the normal one. And the fixed wings are clearly unreasonable.
Some argue that the nosecone “doesn’t fit”, but the nose one is clearly sculpted, similar to Audi. So to me this not a “dummy” nosecone. It’s just missing the active aero.
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mzso
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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AR3-GP wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:11
mzso wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:07
wiktor977 wrote:
29 Jan 2026, 23:51
This undercut is big and the sidepods themselves are very thin, it looks like Aston managed to keep the front tyre wake outboard without using big sidepods. This makes me almost 100% sure that this front wing and the nose are a dummy and the real one will look much different and more complex.

https://i.postimg.cc/cLFR3jh5/Aston-front.jpg
The nosecone's lines don't seem to even fit with the rest of the car. As if they pulled a larger nosecone over the normal one. And the fixed wings are clearly unreasonable.
Some argue that the nosecone “doesn’t fit”, but the nose one is clearly sculpted, similar to Audi. So to me this not a “dummy” nosecone. It’s just missing the active aero.
I'm very doubtful. There seems to be a noticeable brake in the curves of car where the nosecone is attached. Also it seems somewhat crumply slightly in front of the upper suspension linkage, in a rectangular are, as if something was plastered over. As seen in this screenshot as well, more so in motion.
Not sure what to make of the weird trapezoid patch with the dimple around where the wings are.
Last edited by mzso on 30 Jan 2026, 01:23, edited 1 time in total.

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AR3-GP
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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mzso wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:20
AR3-GP wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:11
mzso wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:07


The nosecone's lines don't seem to even fit with the rest of the car. As if they pulled a larger nosecone over the normal one. And the fixed wings are clearly unreasonable.
Some argue that the nosecone “doesn’t fit”, but the nose one is clearly sculpted, similar to Audi. So to me this not a “dummy” nosecone. It’s just missing the active aero.
I'm very doubtful. There seems to be a noticeable brake in the curves of car where the nosecone is attached. Also it seems somewhat crumply around where the driver's number would be. As seen in this screenshot as well, more so in motion.
Not sure what to make of the weird trapezoid patch with the dimple around where the wings are.
The problem is that front wing and nosecone sets up the air to the back of the car. So it is unlikely that it is "fake". They won't learn anything.
Beware of T-Rex

mzso
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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AR3-GP wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:23
The problem is that front wing and nosecone sets up the air to the back of the car. So it is unlikely that it is "fake". They won't learn anything.
Mayb they don't care about the aero right now, only the mechanical side, the engine an reliability. And are planning to test that. Or just failed to finish the real nose. :)

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DAMNINice
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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Everyone seems to ignore that they are now the second team with Mercedes which is only able to move one wing element up front as the nose is attached to the middle element.
REal men play with twins!

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AR3-GP
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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DAMNINice wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:32
Everyone seems to ignore that they are now the second team with Mercedes which is only able to move one wing element up front as the nose is attached to the middle element.
https://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewt ... 0#p1320790
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CHT
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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FNTC wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 00:13
wiktor977 wrote:
29 Jan 2026, 23:51
This undercut is big and the sidepods themselves are very thin, it looks like Aston managed to keep the front tyre wake outboard without using big sidepods. This makes me almost 100% sure that this front wing and the nose are a dummy and the real one will look much different and more complex.
I agree with you. There is something about the front that doesn't seem to match the rest of the car. I also don't see an active front wing. I also have a feeling it's a dummy for this first test.
Perhaps the real nose will look something like this.

Image

matteosc
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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AR3-GP wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:35
DAMNINice wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:32
Everyone seems to ignore that they are now the second team with Mercedes which is only able to move one wing element up front as the nose is attached to the middle element.
https://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewt ... 0#p1320790
I keep wondering what would the benefit be... surely some more clean flow, but is it really worth that much? I guess there are different opinions about this on the grid.

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brakeboosted
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Joined: 30 Dec 2025, 02:02

Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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matteosc wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 02:16
AR3-GP wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:35
DAMNINice wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 01:32
Everyone seems to ignore that they are now the second team with Mercedes which is only able to move one wing element up front as the nose is attached to the middle element.
https://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewt ... 0#p1320790
I keep wondering what would the benefit be... surely some more clean flow, but is it really worth that much? I guess there are different opinions about this on the grid.
I think it is a matter of how the load is distributed across the front wing elements. Perhaps they've found that in their case rotating the 2nd element (or 1st flap if you will) didn't provide a significant enough reduction in drag due to constitute the use of it. In addition to the supposed benefits of having the nose attached to the 2nd element.

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AR3-GP
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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brakeboosted wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 02:23
matteosc wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 02:16
I keep wondering what would the benefit be... surely some more clean flow, but is it really worth that much? I guess there are different opinions about this on the grid.
I think it is a matter of how the load is distributed across the front wing elements. Perhaps they've found that in their case rotating the 2nd element (or 1st flap if you will) didn't provide a significant enough reduction in drag due to constitute the use of it. In addition to the supposed benefits of having the nose attached to the 2nd element.

The other theory that I have is that 3rd element stalls the 2nd element when it goes down. So the 2nd element is not required to move.
Beware of T-Rex

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brakeboosted
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Re: Aston Martin AMR26

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AR3-GP wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 02:31
brakeboosted wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 02:23
matteosc wrote:
30 Jan 2026, 02:16

I keep wondering what would the benefit be... surely some more clean flow, but is it really worth that much? I guess there are different opinions about this on the grid.
I think it is a matter of how the load is distributed across the front wing elements. Perhaps they've found that in their case rotating the 2nd element (or 1st flap if you will) didn't provide a significant enough reduction in drag due to constitute the use of it. In addition to the supposed benefits of having the nose attached to the 2nd element.

The other theory that I have is that 3rd element stalls the 2nd element when it goes down. So the 2nd element is not required to move.
I don't know whether creating large separations behind the wing is necessarily a good idea. You might be reducing the induced drag locally a tiny bit, but that low-energy air from would hit the downstream components by worsening the onset conditions for those components. That typically results in increased drag.