Another detailed model from amateur. It's easier than you think imo:Badger wrote: ↑15 Jan 2026, 18:00We've never seen CAD files of this detail and scope before coming from an amateur. I guess it's not impossible but seems pretty unlikely, especially seeing as no one is taking credit for it.AR3-GP wrote: ↑15 Jan 2026, 17:44What does "professional" mean? There are a lot of "amateurs" or former industry types who would have been able to make something like this in their free time.Badger wrote: ↑15 Jan 2026, 16:56
https://moriteam.com/wp-content/uploads ... nder-4.jpg In this image I spy upper and lower wishbones, pull rod, steering rod. That's all the suspension components I'm aware of.
In the front image with white details I think the pull rod is just hiding behind the upper front wishbone.
I'm not saying this is a car that is going to be rolling out in the next month, but this is professional work IMO. Maybe an early CAD version from a team, maybe an FIA CAD version.
This model also lacks any mechanism for moving the front wing.
As for the DRS mechanism, under the nose seems like a decent bet. Can't see that part from the pics.
--
The more I look at it the more convinced I am. The details are top notch. The subtle geometries in the barge boards, diffuser, and suspension areas. All the ancillary details are there: metal connectors, panels, screws for everything, pitot tubes, antennas, cameras (even the damn 3D camera is included), sensors, cooling louvres, floor edge support rods.
There's a bunch of stuff in the model that no sane "amateur" would bother with. We are talking severe levels of high functioning autism here for someone to bother with all this s***![]()
I think that the one on the Cadillac is a vertical strut supporting the front floor.AR3-GP wrote: ↑17 Jan 2026, 03:50Another "feature" of these 2026 cars seems to be a bargeboard strut. Its present on the Cadillac and it's visible in the VCARB renders.
https://i.postimg.cc/cJJkBSrQ/image.png
https://i.postimg.cc/ZRBfXxPs/image.png
Brake duct winglets were an important part of pre-2022 cars.TeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑19 Jan 2026, 06:54They were added in 2022 to make the cars follow better. Which means they won't follow as good without them, and were only removed to save just a little more drag per lap to help the feeble power unit.
i think he was referring to the wings that swooped over the front tyres.organic wrote: ↑19 Jan 2026, 16:55Brake duct winglets were an important part of pre-2022 cars.TeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑19 Jan 2026, 06:54They were added in 2022 to make the cars follow better. Which means they won't follow as good without them, and were only removed to save just a little more drag per lap to help the feeble power unit.
But I'm not sure vorticism was.cplchanb wrote: ↑19 Jan 2026, 17:06i think he was referring to the wings that swooped over the front tyres.organic wrote: ↑19 Jan 2026, 16:55Brake duct winglets were an important part of pre-2022 cars.TeamKoolGreen wrote: ↑19 Jan 2026, 06:54
They were added in 2022 to make the cars follow better. Which means they won't follow as good without them, and were only removed to save just a little more drag per lap to help the feeble power unit.
vorticism wrote: ↑28 Jun 2025, 01:29Skimming through the 2026 regulations, it seems to have some easter eggs. The biggest one may be the changes to wording of the engine cover & louver aperture allowances. They might provide the main visual differentiator of 2026: large unusual louvers. I haven’t seen anyone pick up on this yet, so here's a guess at one possible permutation:
https://i.postimg.cc/59YKnhSf/2026louve ... ssmall.jpg
vorticism wrote: ↑05 Dec 2025, 04:15...
-A blunt sidepod placed as far forward as possible within the legality box could direct airflow outward toward the floor board, displacing or adding more energy to the front tire wake
...
https://i.postimg.cc/CLqfWRbg/bluntfront2026.jpg
https://i.postimg.cc/NFscktmb/bluntfront2026plan.jpg


Gridlock wrote: ↑12 Jan 2026, 13:07Just a note to say (to everyone, not picking on you), Imgur blocks all UK users, we just see a "content not visible in your region", so it's not ideal if you want everyone to see what you post. https://postimages.org is a good alternative imo.Shrieker wrote: ↑11 Jan 2026, 16:38Obviously, you're not well versed when it comes to AI. It does quite a decent job, a great one, in fact.
Weird. Why do some countries block random image hosters?Shrieker wrote: ↑20 Jan 2026, 02:49Gridlock wrote: ↑12 Jan 2026, 13:07Just a note to say (to everyone, not picking on you), Imgur blocks all UK users, we just see a "content not visible in your region", so it's not ideal if you want everyone to see what you post. https://postimages.org is a good alternative imo.Shrieker wrote: ↑11 Jan 2026, 16:38Obviously, you're not well versed when it comes to AI. It does quite a decent job, a great one, in fact.
The irony being, postimages is banned in my localeI just checked, images there won't open, however I do see them just fine when I enable my vpn. I think you can look into some free browser add on vpns for imgur too