The reason is because the immobile bottom rear wing element still produces downforce by producing upwash, which also produces drag. By flipping elements 2 and 3 upside down, they end up slightly downstream while producing downwash. The upwashign and downwashing airstreams end up mixing, mostly cancelling each other out. This results in extremely low drag.Rikhart wrote: ↑03 May 2026, 11:36I am by no means an aerodynamicist, but I can't understand how stacking both wings one in front of the other in the air path, is worse than having two fully exposed wings!bananapeel23 wrote: ↑02 May 2026, 22:28This one is likely to have more severe issues with indeced drag from tip vortices, since the wing elements sit so far behind the endplates.
The Ferrari wing doesn’t have this issue. It also doesn’t need a DRS pod, which leads to less drag.
The Alpine wing looks amazing, but is supposedly more draggy than even a conventional DRS opening. A Macarena is a much more aerodynamically efficient design.
The Alpine wing is just a very flat wing. It might have a smaller profile, but it still effectively functions as a wing, albeit a weaker one, by producing upwash, and thus drag. It's not massively more draggy, but it's certainly more draggy than a macarena wing.



