Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Porsche explains impact of 963 weight increase after Long Beach

IMSA
Laguna Seca
Porsche explains impact of 963 weight increase after Long Beach

Hadjar to be excluded from Miami GP qualifying over technical breach

Formula 1
Miami GP
Hadjar to be excluded from Miami GP qualifying over technical breach

F1 brings Miami GP start time forward due to thunderstorm threat

Formula 1
Miami GP
F1 brings Miami GP start time forward due to thunderstorm threat

What we learned from the 2026 F1 Miami GP sprint race and qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
Miami GP
What we learned from the 2026 F1 Miami GP sprint race and qualifying

F1 Miami GP: Antonelli holds off Verstappen for third straight pole

Formula 1
Miami GP
F1 Miami GP: Antonelli holds off Verstappen for third straight pole

DS Penske in the points in Berlin Formula E opener

Formula E
Berlin ePrix I
DS Penske in the points in Berlin Formula E opener

Why Norris expects F1 drivers to still “get penalised” for trying to go quicker after rule tweaks

Formula 1
Miami GP
Why Norris expects F1 drivers to still “get penalised” for trying to go quicker after rule tweaks

LIVE: F1 Miami Grand Prix updates - Antonelli holds on to pole from Verstappen

Formula 1
Miami GP
LIVE: F1 Miami Grand Prix updates - Antonelli holds on to pole from Verstappen

Alfa Romeo planning early-season updates for 2021 F1 car

Alfa Romeo is planning to bring updates for its C41 Formula 1 car in the early races of the 2021 season before deciding when to shift focus to 2022

Alfa Romeo unveiled the new C41 car in Poland on Monday, and will give the updated model its first on-track outing on Friday when it completes a shakedown in Barcelona.

With an overhaul of the technical regulations on the horizon for 2022, teams have been permitted to work on developing next year's car since 1 January.

Most have spent the winter trying to evaluate when to fully stop development of the 2021 car to shift focus to 2022, while teams such have Haas have hinted they will make the switch and cease development for 2021 as soon as possible.

Speaking at the unveiling of the C41 car, Alfa Romeo technical director Jan Monchaux said that despite the significance of 2022 in resetting the pecking order, the team was still planning some updates for the early part of the 2021 season.

"2022 is really going to be a new era for the technical [side] in Formula 1," Monchaux said.

"It's a great opportunity for us as a relatively small team to try and catch up with the rest of the field. So it's going to be a crucial year for us.

"With this in mind, and the fact that in 2021, for the first time, we saw the introduction of the budget cap, which means you can only develop with a given amount of resources and they are limited, it's a trade-off we have to do and every team will do between how much is spent on the actual car and how much we go to next year's car.

"I think every team will eventually be stopping earlier, the development of the 2021 car, to have maximum resources on next year's car.

"That doesn't mean we are not going to develop the car. We do plan to have evolutions in the first races, and are still working a little bit in the windtunnel on this car."

PLUS: Why Alfa's 2021 launch says more about its 2022 plans

Monchaux explained that Alfa Romeo would then assess its performance through the early part of the season before deciding how long it kept working on the 2021 car before shifting focus to next year.

"We will see how the season unfolds, if we are forced to do a bit more than we were hoping, or if we can start a touch earlier," Monchaux said.

"But it's certainly going to be a different season, in terms of the race of the technical, as most teams will have an eye on 2022.

"Because of the budget cap, you simply can't afford to be developing two cars in parallel."

Alfa Romeo opted to spend its development tokens for the 2021 car on designing a new nose for the C41, as well as focusing on the front suspension and brake drums.

All teams have faced restrictions on what they can significantly develop for this year following the agreement to freeze certain design aspects in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Previous article Red Bull reveals RB16B Formula 1 car ahead of 2021 season
Next article Horner: Red Bull ignoring Verstappen/Mercedes 2022 speculation

Top Comments

Latest news