Thumb on a hosepipe principle - to make the exhaust shoot out faster, as close to the crash structure (they have moved the position of the tailpipe lower) as possible, to scrape up minor gains from enticing the diffuser extraction to be marginally quicker.

I think this swing arms at the side are there to have the flap higher and/or more foreward in the open position, in contrast to ferrari. I can`t think of another reason to have such a "complicated" pivot point. They could have make it in the same position as ferrari even with the central pod.Brahmal wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 01:21The disadvantage of Red Bull's design will probably be when in corner-mode. Having the central pod, and those very prominent hinges/swing-arms at either side of the flap will almost certainly reduce overall efficiency. Ferrari's wing is so much cleaner and unencumbered in comparison, but it's impossible to tell which trade-off is superior at this stage.
The position of the rotation axis of the flap is primarily to prevent the leading edge of the flap from contacting the trailing edge of the mainplane when it starts to rotate. This is a consideration that has to happen when you intend to rotate the wing in the direction that Red Bull have chosen (for faster pressure recovery), as opposed to the direction that Ferrari have chosen. Unlike what dr obbs said on twitter (Which was wrong), Red Bull would not need to make any compromise to the mainplane (like shortening it). The rotation axis sits above the leading edge of the flap, which means it doesn't move down when it rotates. That's just a geometry thing. If they put the rotation axis at the back like Ferrari, the leading edge of the flap would translate down and hit the mainplane.


With the same position of the hinge (directly above the leading edge of flap), what if the trailing edge of mainplane had an 'upturn' ? (before looking at these close camera shots, I blindly assumed all teams have an upturn on their mainplane trailing edge, since stacked wings work best when they have some overlap, inorder to keep the flow attached for aggressive camber angles).AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 15:59The position of the rotation axis of the flap is primarily to prevent the leading edge of the flap from contacting the trailing edge of the mainplane when it starts to rotate. This is a consideration that has to happen when you intend to rotate the wing in the direction that Red Bull have chosen (for faster pressure recovery), as opposed to the direction that Ferrari have chosen. Unlike what dr obbs said on twitter (Which was wrong), Red Bull would not need to make any compromise to the mainplane (like shortening it). The rotation axis sits above the leading edge of the flap, which means it doesn't move down when it rotates. That's just a geometry thing. If they put the rotation axis at the back like Ferrari, the leading edge of the flap would translate down and hit the mainplane.
https://i.postimg.cc/QC9qTmCq/image.png
As long as the trailing edge of the mainplane is physically below the flap (that's always the case by definition), then there is no issue. That's demonstrated by this picture. The leading edge of the flap doesn't move down because of where Red Bull placed the pivot axis.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:38
With the same position of the hinge (directly above the leading edge of flap), what if the trailing edge of mainplane had an 'upturn' ? (before looking at these close camera shots, I blindly assumed all teams have an upturn on their mainplane trailing edge, since stacked wings work best when they have some overlap, inorder to keep the flow attached for aggressive camber angles).

so by definition of the formula, no overlap in z-direction ? then my Q is invalid.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:42As long as the trailing edge of the mainplane is physically below the flap (that's always the case by definition), then there is no issue. That's demonstrated by this picture. The leading edge of the flap doesn't move down because of where Red Bull placed the pivot axis.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:38
With the same position of the hinge (directly above the leading edge of flap), what if the trailing edge of mainplane had an 'upturn' ? (before looking at these close camera shots, I blindly assumed all teams have an upturn on their mainplane trailing edge, since stacked wings work best when they have some overlap, inorder to keep the flow attached for aggressive camber angles).
https://i.postimg.cc/vmjRFPJL/image.png
The two wing elements physically cannot occupy the same space in Z. It is physically impossible, not related to any rules. So if the parts are not touching when the DRS is closed, then they won't touch when it opens, because of the position of the rotation axis. That is as long as the mainplane is below the flap.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:48so by definition of the formula, no overlap in z-direction ? then my Q is invalid.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:42As long as the trailing edge of the mainplane is physically below the flap (that's always the case by definition), then there is no issue. That's demonstrated by this picture. The leading edge of the flap doesn't move down because of where Red Bull placed the pivot axis.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:38
With the same position of the hinge (directly above the leading edge of flap), what if the trailing edge of mainplane had an 'upturn' ? (before looking at these close camera shots, I blindly assumed all teams have an upturn on their mainplane trailing edge, since stacked wings work best when they have some overlap, inorder to keep the flow attached for aggressive camber angles).
https://i.postimg.cc/vmjRFPJL/image.png
I always get the axis' names wrong. I meant overlap in x direction (trailing edge of mainplane directly 'behind' the leading edge of flap) when the multi-element wing structure with high camber, has overlapping surfaces. Just like the front wing. Helps with flow attachment.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:56The two wing elements physically cannot occupy the same space in Z. It is physically impossible, not related to any rules. So if the parts are not touching when the DRS is closed, then they won't touch when it opens, because of the position of the rotation axis. That is as long as the mainplane is below the flap.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:48so by definition of the formula, no overlap in z-direction ? then my Q is invalid.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:42
As long as the trailing edge of the mainplane is physically below the flap (that's always the case by definition), then there is no issue. That's demonstrated by this picture. The leading edge of the flap doesn't move down because of where Red Bull placed the pivot axis.
https://i.postimg.cc/vmjRFPJL/image.png
If there was some curl in the mainplane trailing edge and it wrapped around the leading edge of the flap, then the pivot axis could just move further forwards, so that the flap moves up when it starts to rotate. Every situation can be engineered around by repositioning the axis.
Yes I understand you. That is also answered above.venkyhere wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 17:40I always get the axis' names wrong. I meant overlap in x direction (trailing edge of mainplane directly 'behind' the leading edge of flap) when the multi-element wing structure with high camber, has overlapping surfaces. Just like the front wing. Helps with flow attachment.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 16:56
If there was some curl in the mainplane trailing edge and it wrapped around the leading edge of the flap, then the pivot axis could just move further forwards, so that the flap moves up when it starts to rotate. Every situation can be engineered around by repositioning the axis.
Sorry for the stupidly framed Q in my earlier post. Could have drawn a diagram instead.
That`s true, overlooked that.AR3-GP wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 15:59The position of the rotation axis of the flap is primarily to prevent the leading edge of the flap from contacting the trailing edge of the mainplane when it starts to rotate. This is a consideration that has to happen when you intend to rotate the wing in the direction that Red Bull have chosen (for faster pressure recovery), as opposed to the direction that Ferrari have chosen. Unlike what dr obbs said on twitter (Which was wrong), Red Bull would not need to make any compromise to the mainplane (like shortening it). The rotation axis sits above the leading edge of the flap, which means it doesn't move down when it rotates. That's just a geometry thing. If they put the rotation axis at the back like Ferrari, the leading edge of the flap would translate down and hit the mainplane.
https://i.postimg.cc/QC9qTmCq/image.png
This one is likely to have more severe issues with indeced drag from tip vortices, since the wing elements sit so far behind the endplates.