

I think is common to have a huge amount of badly managed wiring during testing, I am talking for all teams. They are not part of the wiring harness of the car, but more so they can quickly install and connect aero racks, Temp. Cameras, sensors and so on.
They can run presure taps on floor etc during testing, needing extraneous wiring loom to facilitate this. Likey not incorporated in race build specifications.Ferdecarreras wrote: ↑13 Feb 2026, 22:01I think is common to have a huge amount of badly managed wiring during testing, I am talking for all teams. They are not part of the wiring harness of the car, but more so they can quickly install and connect aero racks, Temp. Cameras, sensors and so on.
Unusual in that previously these have been supported by a "suspension " device to allow for track strike, which doesn't appear to be facilitated in this design.MIKEY_! wrote: ↑28 Feb 2026, 08:44"Very basic aero" seems a bit harsh to me, despite the high expectations created by switching focus to 2026 so early. There is some interesting complexity with the varying camber of the front suspension shrouds, the unusual and relatively complex bib stay, the winglets behind the roll hoop, the cutout on the back of the floor board, and the double swages on the rear wing endplate. If the car was working well we'd be oohing and ahhing over these details.
But the car is slow, the sidepods are bulky and bland, and the roll hoop looks the same as previous years. Hopefully we'll get a better picture of the aero performance once they sort the weight issues out.