Yeah these are pictures from testing that I hadn't seen before. It appears that the first floor inlet tapers down and ends where the flat floor begins, and should create a pretty powerful vortex that runs along the edge of the "canoe" floor section. That big flat strake is clearly considered as the fifth floor inlet strake or "dagger" for regulatory purposes.ClassicLivery wrote: ↑02 Mar 2026, 08:15Floor bargeboards are still there! edit,sorry thought these were from Australia already

What are the yellow arrows interacting with the four daggers doing? Pretty sure that, from a side view, the dagger would appear triangular with the back edge fully attached to the face of the floor lip. No porosity there.
It's unclear to me, hence my post. I don't know whether it's play of light or whether there is a hole sliced on the 'body' of the "dagger". In fact they look nothing like typical daggers do.
Weren't there two different floors that were tried ? Clearly the top and bottom ones in your pic, are different (reference against the innermost vertical entry).AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 08:25I don't think the vanes are porous
https://i.postimg.cc/nLF7mFzz/image.png
It's the same floor taken at different angles. I took those screenshots from day 3 evening session at T10. They are milliseconds apart.venkyhere wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 08:39Weren't there two different floors that were tried ? Clearly the top and bottom ones in your pic, are different (reference against the innermost vertical entry).AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 08:25I don't think the vanes are porous
https://i.postimg.cc/nLF7mFzz/image.png
I understand, and believe you. However, my brain is having a hard time 'projecting' a mental image of how the 'thing' in the close up pics in my post looks like the top-half pic (from the straighter angle) in your post. I know the 'tail' wont be seen from that angle, but the 'front rib' resembles a simple straight edge 'too perfectly' in the top-half pic.AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 08:43It's the same floor taken at different angles. I took those screenshots from day 3 evening session at T10. They are milliseconds apart.venkyhere wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 08:39Weren't there two different floors that were tried ? Clearly the top and bottom ones in your pic, are different (reference against the innermost vertical entry).AR3-GP wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 08:25I don't think the vanes are porous
https://i.postimg.cc/nLF7mFzz/image.png
The bottom edges of the triangular daggers are curved quite dramatically, shaping the dagger like a cone-section. This creates some optical illusions from certain angles that make it quite confusing to look at, I agree. Some of the other cars don't have this curved edge and the triangular shape is much more apparent, but there's no fundamental difference. The only car that seems to be doing something truly unique is the Ferrari with their strange grid-fin arrangement that I still haven't seen a really sharp picture of.
Yes, I understand the shape. The close-up pic (where I drew some dummy lines) reveals the same very well. What I am unable to convince my mind is how 'perfectly sharp & straight' the rib looks in the front-on shot from far away. For example, here is the VCARBs daggers - the most vanilla and simple floor entry with outward curl towards their bottom - notice how the left hand side sets' floor-merging end is easy to infer the curl from, even if we dont look at the right hand set at all. But the redbull ones looks ultra-complex and ultra-deceiving to me.Brahmal wrote: ↑03 Mar 2026, 16:09The bottom edges of the triangular daggers are curved quite dramatically, shaping the dagger like a cone-section. This creates some optical illusions from certain angles that make it quite confusing to look at, I agree. Some of the other cars don't have this curved edge and the triangular shape is much more apparent, but there's no fundamental difference. The only car that seems to be doing something truly unique is the Ferrari with their strange grid-fin arrangement that I still haven't seen a really sharp picture of.

I think it's a language barrier issue. "Lower" (used by google translate) wouldn't necessarily mean physically lowering the engine mounting (which I don't think is possible to do in the pitlane without a change in the monocoque) , it could most likely mean 'lower engine mode' , since running in higher power mode possibly produced larger vibrations.euv2 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2026, 13:00
Verstappen come Leclerc in low-profile mode: "I think we still have quite a bit of work to do to be on the front row, but it's something I had already anticipated." There's a lot of concern even outside of Honda (egregious case) regarding the vibrations generated by the engines. Red Bull PT had to lower its Power Unit in the second test precisely for this reason, and even Mercedes isn't totally confident in terms of reliability. It'll be a weekend to follow entirely #AutoRacer #AusGP #F1
What impact could this have besides lower CG?