When a new ruleset comes into play, engineers are effectively penning their designs blindfolded until the start of the first test. A hint or two might appear from discussions within technical meetings, particularly when a team wants to try to stack the odds in its favour with the wording of the rules, but ultimately the directions taken with car design remain unknown until the opening test – or, in Formula 1’s marketing spiel, ‘pre-season track session’.
And it was thus with F1’s 2022 aerodynamic overhaul. With a return of ground-effects after 40 years on hiatus, the designers had a new challenge to consider in developing an efficient and effective underbody. Since the venturi tunnels underneath the car are much more potent at high speeds, this was going to shift the performance window quite considerably compared to the flat-bottomed cars; low-speed corners were going to be an altogether clunky experience for the driver, offset by the greater grip on offer in the high-speed sections.
Elsewhere, the front and rear wings were more closely controlled to reduce the overall wake of the car, meaning that the cars would theoretically be able to follow much more closely through corners. The highly complex bargeboards of the 2017-21 era cars were also removed to enhance that effect, since the predilection to shove airflow outwards to manage tyre-wake flow was a key sticking point in F1’s desire to ‘spice up the show’. There were also further additions to the