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

How Antonelli restored Mercedes order in F1 Miami GP qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
Miami GP
How Antonelli restored Mercedes order in F1 Miami GP qualifying

Verstappen reveals hidden factor in Red Bull’s F1 recovery

Formula 1
Miami GP
Verstappen reveals hidden factor in Red Bull’s F1 recovery

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

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

Alpine explains bulky airbox after "body shaming"

Alpine's executive director Marcin Budkowski has explained the team's decision for its bulky airbox on its 2021 Formula 1 car, saying he was "surprised by the amount of body shaming".

Fernando Alonso, Alpine A521

When Esteban Ocon took Alpine's new car onto the track at the start of pre-season testing in Bahrain on Friday, the bulbous airbox and engine cover on the A521 immediately caught the eye of observers and fans.

While F1 teams usually tend to package the power unit as tightly as possible, Alpine's radically different design looked like a throwback to the 70s, when giant engine covers were briefly in vogue.

Budkowski quipped he was "a bit surprised by the amount of body shaming on our car" but explained the Enstone team's design choice was rooted in aerodynamics.

Read Also:

"It’s a technical choice, we found that slimming the sidepods was a positive direction, which is nothing new really," Budkowski said on Saturday.

"We’ve repackaged and relocated some of the bulky things in the car, and we’ve put them behind the air inlet. Yes, it gives a fairly spectacularly bulky shape in the car, but it works for us.

"There are centre of gravity compromises, but usually aero performance wins over weight and centre of gravity."

ANALYSIS: What’s behind Alpine's jumbo airbox?

Fernando Alonso, Alpine A521

Fernando Alonso, Alpine A521

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

During the off-season F1 teams were hard at work to find new solutions to the floor area, the aero performance of which has been curtailed by the tweaked 2021 regulations.

Budkowski said his team was intrigued by the design solutions its rivals came up with as every outfit in the paddock finally got a chance to take a look at the competition.

"We’re pretty much as everyone else in the pit lane, we’re looking at pictures of other cars, the engineers back at the factory are going through pictures and going to see if there’s good ideas or not on the car," Budkowski added.

"I think there’s interesting things on any car. The area that has changed the most is the kind of rear part of the floor, which is where the regulation changes were.

"The rear end of the car and obviously the complex areas that are the usual suspects; front wing, bargeboards, are the ones we’re looking at."

Previous article Bottas: Mercedes W12 F1 has "snappy and unforgiving" rear end
Next article Ferrari opts for radical F1 diffuser fin solution

Top Comments

Latest news