via motorsport
via motorsport
Ferrari has always been cooking especially at the start of regulation changes - immediately thinking of the high sidepod inlets on the wonderful machine called SF70H - and by the looks of it, even more so now.
I don't understand the connection to Red Bull. The laws of physics don't change from lap to lap. Put an object with less drag down a straight with the same engine power and you will measure the difference in top speed immediately. It doesn't have a "warmup" period. If there is head/tail wind, the pitot sensor allows you to back out the real top speed.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:23You need several continous laps to properly confirm this. There's also no source given, just "according to initial data". Initial data of who? Some person looking at livetiming? Or initial talks in the paddock. Because the second is infinitely more reliable.
If you just look at one speedtrap once you can arrive to wrong conclusions. RedBull hit 344 kmh last week, but they haven't touched that this week at all.
Ferrari would obviously know exactly how much their wing was worth after only one run. But the rest? Not so easy.AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:33I don't understand the connection to Red Bull. The laws of physics don't change from lap to lap. Put an object with less drag down a straight with the same engine power and you will measure the difference in top speed immediately. It doesn't have a "warmup" period. If there is head/tail wind, the pitot sensor allows you to back out the real top speed.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:23You need several continous laps to properly confirm this. There's also no source given, just "according to initial data". Initial data of who? Some person looking at livetiming? Or initial talks in the paddock. Because the second is infinitely more reliable.
If you just look at one speedtrap once you can arrive to wrong conclusions. RedBull hit 344 kmh last week, but they haven't touched that this week at all.
downside is, it can most probably be easy to be copied
I take for granted that Italian motorsport has insiders at Ferrari. So I haven't looked at this problem.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:36Ferrari would obviously know exactly how much their wing was worth after only one run. But the rest? Not so easy.AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:33I don't understand the connection to Red Bull. The laws of physics don't change from lap to lap. Put an object with less drag down a straight with the same engine power and you will measure the difference in top speed immediately. It doesn't have a "warmup" period. If there is head/tail wind, the pitot sensor allows you to back out the real top speed.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:23You need several continous laps to properly confirm this. There's also no source given, just "according to initial data". Initial data of who? Some person looking at livetiming? Or initial talks in the paddock. Because the second is infinitely more reliable.
If you just look at one speedtrap once you can arrive to wrong conclusions. RedBull hit 344 kmh last week, but they haven't touched that this week at all.
You don't know if they were running some extra low drag configuration that loses them 1 second in the corners to test their new wing. Or maybe they depleted the battery to test drag levels at top speed.
That's why I am saying, who is the owner of this "initial data"? There is no proper source given. I am not saying there is no way this is true. I am saying it's better to wait for a proper source to confirm. Because 8-10 kmh extra speed while having the same downforce in the corners is legit an insane amount of gain.
The reference to RedBull was also because of this uncertainty on our end. Toto started spewing bullsh*t about how they are unable to match RedBull's speed, when it was mostly down to a different deployment strategy on their part that stopped deployment earlier in the start/finish straight.
I just checked motorsport ita channels and there's no 8/10 kmh number mentioned anywhere, so I still don't know what the source is. You know these things sometimes propagate for no reason. Some guy spews some number and people just take it for granted without verifying.AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:38I take for granted that Italian motorsport has insiders at Ferrari. So I haven't looked at this problem.Emag wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:36Ferrari would obviously know exactly how much their wing was worth after only one run. But the rest? Not so easy.AR3-GP wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:33
I don't understand the connection to Red Bull. The laws of physics don't change from lap to lap. Put an object with less drag down a straight with the same engine power and you will measure the difference in top speed immediately. It doesn't have a "warmup" period. If there is head/tail wind, the pitot sensor allows you to back out the real top speed.
You don't know if they were running some extra low drag configuration that loses them 1 second in the corners to test their new wing. Or maybe they depleted the battery to test drag levels at top speed.
That's why I am saying, who is the owner of this "initial data"? There is no proper source given. I am not saying there is no way this is true. I am saying it's better to wait for a proper source to confirm. Because 8-10 kmh extra speed while having the same downforce in the corners is legit an insane amount of gain.
The reference to RedBull was also because of this uncertainty on our end. Toto started spewing bullsh*t about how they are unable to match RedBull's speed, when it was mostly down to a different deployment strategy on their part that stopped deployment earlier in the start/finish straight.

The flipping mechanic is probably easy to copy, but that doesn't mean you can capitalize the gains right away.
They had to design a completely new mechanism instead of the central one, you can see them at the rotation points, somewhat bulky devices. So it is 100% deliberate.motobaleno wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026, 12:54sky has just released a camera car of the rotating flap. Definitely it is not a malfunction. maybe a test, but 100% deliberately.