Gear shifting is impacted by how the MGU-K is operated; in the previous rule set MV often complained about the quality of downshifting & and was frequently coached by GP on settings to alleviate it.
KERS is then part of the gearbox and so the connection between engine, gearbox and KERS needs to be fixed. This update for Miami is almost a B revision with front wing, rear wing, sidepods, halo winglet and reduced weight.
Red Bull had a tyre test in Suzuka and then the camera day at Silverstone during this break.Badger wrote: ↑23 Apr 2026, 10:23Well they are clearly running two different wings, one with the McLaren-style side winglet and one looks like the old spec without it. We can gather these are from the same test because both have the new sidepod.
Also allegedly a new rear wing opening mechanism (not the same as Ferrari). I can't tell on that one.
I think you're correct, as that's the only way the central actuator arms could work without clipping. Downside could be a stronger parachute effect during actuation than Ferrari. The ends are mounted on small swing-arms to increase the size of the opening. It all looks a bit delicate no?
It certainly has more moving parts and seems like a bit of a contraption. Ferrari's actuators seem like the bigger engineering challenge though, and probably weigh more.
I think Ferrari has one actuator per side. Removing the central actuator is in general beneficial for efficiency, both open and closed. It is all a matter of how small and reliable the side actuators are.SiLo wrote: ↑23 Apr 2026, 23:58This version of the wing uses a central actuator, I guess if most of the drag loss is from the inversion of the wing this is actually the simpler solution surely? Ferrari are having issues having only a single actuator on one side and having to balance it on the other.
This seems a normal rear wing. Pretty confused about these pictures. Are we sure they are not from two separate events?
About Red bull's flip flop wing (at Silverstone today) it's certainly a lot more different from Ferrari's “Macarena” wing.
My guess is that it rotates counter clockwise (if you were looking from the side and the car was driving from right to left). So the actuator arm is actually pushing the upper flaps and it's rotating about that connection point.SilviuAgo wrote: ↑24 Apr 2026, 10:51About Red bull's flip flop wing (at Silverstone today) it's certainly a lot more different from Ferrari's “Macarena” wing.
There's central actuator present, plus the small elements which make the upper part of the wing stay opened higher(which reduces even more gap than normally, seems more than Ferrari's). But there's something else that actually got me wondering.
The upper part of the wing seems to me way too short for it to be able to fully close when it's turned off. That is just based on this photo. Compare its length to the amount of gap created when it opened. Ferrari's macarena wing for example was a lot longer than this one. Maybe this one is also closing differently?
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HGnF1mMbAAA ... ame=medium
You can juuust make out what looks like tge pivot point of "bell-crank" arrangement in the side mount of wing.
This looks more elegant than the Ferrari solution. Ferrari’s actuators take up some space that reduces the rear wing width.