and Piastri said following is just as bad as 2025, even though the 2026 cars having much less downforce. My god this sport is so useless
and Piastri said following is just as bad as 2025, even though the 2026 cars having much less downforce. My god this sport is so useless
We have underestimated how much more efficient the venturi floor is. Pound for pound of downforce, the venturi cars were less sensitive and/or had a smaller wake. These flat floor cars either release even more dirty air, or the aero is just far more sensitive to even the smallest amount of turbulence.
Following in 2025 was not that bad. It's being overexaggerated. Cars weren't doing what they did pre 2022 being unable to follow after a few laps and going back to cool down and then never attack again. You could attack multiple times.AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 01:26We have underestimated how much more efficient the venturi floor is. Pound for pound of downforce, the venturi cars were less sensitive and/or had a smaller wake. These flat floor cars either release even more dirty air, or the aero is just far more sensitive to even the smallest amount of turbulence.
The best solution might have been to make smaller venturi cars so we would get the benefit of smaller cars and less downforce, while retaining the better following characteristics. Following in 2025 was bad only because the cars were allowed to generate too much downforce.
I know somewhere team kool greene is having an "I told you so" party![]()
I don't think your theory of "ability to follow largely depends on level downforce" holds much water. Not while aerodynamic downforce is a major part of car performance.AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 01:26We have underestimated how much more efficient the venturi floor is. Pound for pound of downforce, the venturi cars were less sensitive and/or had a smaller wake. These flat floor cars either release even more dirty air, or the aero is just far more sensitive to even the smallest amount of turbulence.
The best solution might have been to make smaller venturi cars so we would get the benefit of smaller cars and less downforce, while retaining the better following characteristics. Following in 2025 was bad only because the cars were allowed to generate too much downforce.
I know somewhere team kool greene is having an "I told you so" party![]()
Delta is only needed because of the inability to follow well. Cars being close should be a lot better for racing.f1isgood wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 01:52The issue with 2025 was field convergence. Everyone except McLaren were in a 2 to 3 tenths bubble at the front. You just cannot pass with that delta. Qualify well or go home basically. All again thanks to the FIA being lenient with dirty-air generating components and falling from Toto's plot on safety, resulting in more and more bodywork downforce as the regulations progressed.
It does in the sense that where we are starting in 2026 will become much worse by 2028 within this rules framework.mzso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 03:04I don't think your theory of "ability to follow largely depends on level downforce" holds much water. Not while aerodynamic downforce is a major part of car performance.AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 01:26We have underestimated how much more efficient the venturi floor is. Pound for pound of downforce, the venturi cars were less sensitive and/or had a smaller wake. These flat floor cars either release even more dirty air, or the aero is just far more sensitive to even the smallest amount of turbulence.
The best solution might have been to make smaller venturi cars so we would get the benefit of smaller cars and less downforce, while retaining the better following characteristics. Following in 2025 was bad only because the cars were allowed to generate too much downforce.
I know somewhere team kool greene is having an "I told you so" party![]()
I think it's overwhelmingly about "dirty" air and sensitivity. And they dirtied up the air really well, and removed the less sensitive venturi tunnels.
I only noticed this in the Thursday evening session. You are saying they did it again on Friday?gearboxtrouble wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 05:35One interesting thing I noticed is Red Bull ran without one of the bargeboards/front floor devices the last two days of testing. One of the things that's become clear over this test is that teams think you lose less laptime running slower in fast corners than what you gain harvesting through those corners for the straights. This ridiculous engine formula might make have made it less optimal to have more downforce past a certain point. Maybe Red Bull were testing what would happen if they lost one of those devices in an incident but maybe what they're really testing is reducing downforce which you will never need in an asymmetric way to suit the majority of the corners so that the extra harvesting they do at lower cornering speeds makes more of a difference on the straights. Just a theory but I thought it was really weird they ran without one of those "bargeboards" for a long time both of the last two days.
Thats what I read. Afternoon again with Hadjar.AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 06:27I only noticed this in the Thursday evening session. You are saying they did it again on Friday?gearboxtrouble wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 05:35One interesting thing I noticed is Red Bull ran without one of the bargeboards/front floor devices the last two days of testing. One of the things that's become clear over this test is that teams think you lose less laptime running slower in fast corners than what you gain harvesting through those corners for the straights. This ridiculous engine formula might make have made it less optimal to have more downforce past a certain point. Maybe Red Bull were testing what would happen if they lost one of those devices in an incident but maybe what they're really testing is reducing downforce which you will never need in an asymmetric way to suit the majority of the corners so that the extra harvesting they do at lower cornering speeds makes more of a difference on the straights. Just a theory but I thought it was really weird they ran without one of those "bargeboards" for a long time both of the last two days.
Not sure I follow. If cars are close in performance, you simply cannot race wheel-to-wheel consistently. You need either different strengths or performance delta that comes from tires or something else to race. If you look back at early 2022, the racing was good also because Ferrari and Red Bull had very different strengths. As regulations mature the gaps close up much more as all cars converge more or less towards one specific successful formula which makes it a qualifying contest. Cars being close in performance is only good in theory, not in reality. It's nothing new though. The only way racing happens is if the driver in front makes some error from time to time. And nowadays I think drivers have gotten pretty good.mzso wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 03:04I don't think your theory of "ability to follow largely depends on level downforce" holds much water. Not while aerodynamic downforce is a major part of car performance.AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 01:26We have underestimated how much more efficient the venturi floor is. Pound for pound of downforce, the venturi cars were less sensitive and/or had a smaller wake. These flat floor cars either release even more dirty air, or the aero is just far more sensitive to even the smallest amount of turbulence.
The best solution might have been to make smaller venturi cars so we would get the benefit of smaller cars and less downforce, while retaining the better following characteristics. Following in 2025 was bad only because the cars were allowed to generate too much downforce.
I know somewhere team kool greene is having an "I told you so" party![]()
I think it's overwhelmingly about "dirty" air and sensitivity. And they dirtied up the air really well, and removed the less sensitive venturi tunnels.
Delta is only needed because of the inability to follow well. Cars being close should be a lot better for racing.f1isgood wrote: ↑14 Feb 2026, 01:52The issue with 2025 was field convergence. Everyone except McLaren were in a 2 to 3 tenths bubble at the front. You just cannot pass with that delta. Qualify well or go home basically. All again thanks to the FIA being lenient with dirty-air generating components and falling from Toto's plot on safety, resulting in more and more bodywork downforce as the regulations progressed.
And I don't think the myth of Toto has any merit, it was harmful for drivers' well being the way it was in 2022. There was too much potential to create dirty air and teams developed to create more and more of it. The issue is FIA neglect.