Motorsport.it claims it serves two purposes: 1)making the wing stall cleaning the wake; 2)supporting first part of brakingbluechris wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 19:47Correct my thinking if I’m wrong about this 180-degree rear wing, guys.
We have one wing, and whether it opens normally or in reverse (like what Ferrari did today), I assume the drag remains the same.
When it opens normally, the air passes through, and because it is a wing and not completely flat, the air is directed slightly upward, which pressures the car down.
However, when it opens and rotates 180 degrees, the air is directed downward. This forces the airflow hitting the rear overall air that's coming to the back of the car into a flatter trajectory, causing the air to accelerate. Another gain is that since the car is lifted slightly, the team can run a softer suspension. This would provide better braking and more grip in all corners, especially the slow ones, and lead to better overall tire management.
Those are just my thoughts, but as an armchair old-fart I can’t exactly back them up aerodynamically!
Edit: @GrizzleBoy you are in my thoughts
via a parachute-like aerobrake. They also say solution is still in the experimental phase and for some time it will not be mounted again. They also report rumors of other teams already looking at it in the CFD.



