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Top 10 Le Mans Ferraris ranked: Testa Rossa, P4, 499P and more

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WEC
Top 10 Le Mans Ferraris ranked: Testa Rossa, P4, 499P and more

What we learned from Friday practice at the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix

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Formula 1
Monaco GP
What we learned from Friday practice at the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix

Alonso slams 2026 F1 cars as “worst ever” in Monaco

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Alonso slams 2026 F1 cars as “worst ever” in Monaco

F1 Monaco GP: Hamilton heads Ferrari 1-2 from Verstappen in FP2

Formula 1
Monaco GP
F1 Monaco GP: Hamilton heads Ferrari 1-2 from Verstappen in FP2

F1 Monaco GP: Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in first practice, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

Formula 1
Monaco GP
F1 Monaco GP: Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in first practice, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

Audi responds to F1's future engine plans: "We don't have problems with V8s"

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Audi responds to F1's future engine plans: "We don't have problems with V8s"

LIVE: F1 Monaco GP live commentary and updates - Leclerc tops FP1, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

Formula 1
Monaco GP
LIVE: F1 Monaco GP live commentary and updates - Leclerc tops FP1, Hadjar and Alonso suffer crashes

LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Hamilton leads Leclerc in red-flagged FP2

Formula 1
Monaco GP
LIVE: F1 Monaco GP commentary and updates - Hamilton leads Leclerc in red-flagged FP2

Monaco GP likely to be limit of Formula 1 teams' extreme T-wings

Force India thinks it unlikely that Formula 1 teams will go any more extreme than the triple-decker T-wings that have appeared at the Monaco Grand Prix

T-wing designs evolved quickly through 2017, with first single and then double wings appearing, before new oval solutions came into play.

For the Monaco GP, Force India and Renault took things to a new level with a triple decker oval solution for the high-downforce track.

Asked by Autosport whether he felt there was scope for even more aggressive solutions in the future, Force India's technical director Andy Green said he was doubtful.

He suggested a triple layer was only suitable at circuits where drag was not important, as there was a straightline speed penalty from the solution run in Monaco.

"For us the triple decker is quite Monaco specific," said Green.

"Maybe we will have a variant of that in Singapore or possibly Hungary, but at the other tracks we will see a reduced version of it.

"Track efficiency dictates really what you can can put on the car."

Green added that the use of the oval ends to the T-wing was to minimise aerodynamic losses that would come from having actual wing tips.

The debut of the T-wing on the Force India car has come at a time when it is chasing improvements to the rear end of its VJM10.

Although an update package introduced at the Spanish GP has improved matters, Green said his team was not yet fully on top of the situation.

"I think we are making progress," he said.

"It is taking time, we can see that.

"We are chipping away at it, and everything we bring to the car, we learn from it, and we understand a new direction to go in.

"It is a multi-faceted problem, so we are coming at it from lots of angles.

It takes a long time to come together, but we do know a lot more about it now than the race before, and the race before that.

"So we are definitely making progress, but we are nowhere near solving the problem."

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