A place to discuss the characteristics of the cars in Formula One, both current as well as historical. Laptimes, driver worshipping and team chatter do not belong here.
You can see from the side-on shot that they have cooling louvers on the back of the engine cover centerline like Haas and Red Bull ran last year, despite having no shark fin.
I wonder if they moved the cockpit rearwards in order to give themselves more distance between the tunnel entrances and the front axle, causing them to push everything behind it backwards, and that's why they don't have a shark fin.
Last edited by continuum16 on 14 Feb 2023, 20:23, edited 1 time in total.
"You can't argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience"
- Mark Twain
A different angle. I wonder if they opted to increase the width of the nose to put more front downforce, instead of increasing the size of the front wing. The latter still looks like the smallest FW.
You can see from the side-on shot that they have cooling louvers on the back of the engine cover centerline like Haas and Red Bull ran last year, despite having no shark fin.
I wonder if they moved the cockpit rearwards in order to give themselves more distance between the tunnel entrances and the front axle, causing them to push everything behind it backwards, and that's why they don't have a shark fin.
Those rear outlets got more prominent indeed. And maybe they are filling what remains of the shark fin volume.
AMuS 2022
Regarding the cockpit position, that's what I was speculating in the other thread.
At the very least, I think Alpine's aero team proved themselves to be pretty solid. Not too much visual difference I can spot from the above photos which shows confidence in their concept.
If they can reliably wring more performance out of the PU, they should be up at the front of the midfield again.