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How F1's current aerodynamic battlegrounds are shaping up - and what's next in 2027

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British GP
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The new tech concept Ferrari's 2018 F1 title hopes now rest on

Ferrari now needs a dramatic turnaround to beat Mercedes to the 2018 Formula 1 world championship, and is counting on the major upgrade it introduced during the Russian Grand Prix

Wholesale changes appeared on the SF71H at Sochi, as the team introduced a significant update package for the front-end that hints at a new concept direction.

Ferrari's new front wing blends the current concept, some ideas used by Red Bull and innovations that now make sense based on the team's understanding of the 2019 regulations.

The design team has incorporated the novel footplate solution pioneered by Red Bull in 2017 and tested by Ferrari in Hungary, featuring a raised and inclined footplate that is also pushed back from the wing's leading edge [1].

The endplate design comes straight from the pages of the Red Bull playbook too, with the leading edge shaped in a way that entices airflow to converge on the vertical slot behind [2].

These alterations make the outer section of the wing less sensitive to pitch changes and result in a less volatile footplate vortex, which is subsequently less likely to burst.

Making such bold changes to the outer part of the wing has made adjustments necessary elsewhere too.

The upturned profile on the leading edge of the mainplane [3] is a little more pronounced, altering how the airflow behaves, whilst the furniture [4] on the inside of the endplate designed to control outwash has also been revised.

Coupled to the change in the mainplane's geometry and the resultant effect the other changes have had on the wing's ability to create outwash, the flap geometry has also been amended.

An additional slot has been made in the outboard section [5]. Perhaps more importantly, the team has toned down the aggressive transition between the tunnelled outboard section of the wing and the flapped region [6].

Ferrari has also focused a considerable amount of attention to an area of the car that had so far been relatively untouched throughout 2018 - its turning vanes [2].

The relatively simple design used so far this season has been cast aside in favour of a much more complex set of separate forward reaching elements.

Where the slotted design previously used favoured a more gentle approach to realigning the flow, it's likely that the new design works the airflow much harder and sets up a stronger vortex to feed flow downstream.

Ferrari was initially seen using its new rear wing endplate design in tandem with the spoon shaped rear wing elements, in order to reduce drag on the straights around the Sochi track, but had to revert to a more conventional set-up to improve balance.

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