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F1 drivers to take to Lego minicars at British GP

Formula 1
British GP
F1 drivers to take to Lego minicars at British GP

Gresini signs Mir and Holgado on two-year MotoGP deals

MotoGP
Dutch GP
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Why this looks like Russell’s best chance yet at the British GP

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
Why this looks like Russell’s best chance yet at the British GP

Vote: Autosport Best of the Month for June 2026

General
Vote: Autosport Best of the Month for June 2026

Why similar Williams and Aston Martin failures are oddly reassuring

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Formula 1
Austrian GP
Why similar Williams and Aston Martin failures are oddly reassuring

McLaren still to investigate why it's losing to Mercedes on the straights, despite same PU

Formula 1
Austrian GP
McLaren still to investigate why it's losing to Mercedes on the straights, despite same PU

Explained: The factors behind WRC’s big 2027 transition and the hurdles it still faces

Feature
WRC
Rally Greece
Explained: The factors behind WRC’s big 2027 transition and the hurdles it still faces

Marquez admits he "didn't want to walk into the paddock" because he "associated it with pain"

MotoGP
Dutch GP
Marquez admits he "didn't want to walk into the paddock" because he "associated it with pain"

Horner: No need to change rules now

Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner thinks there is now no need for the FIA to open up the suspension rules in Formula 1 following its recent clarification about ride-height control

Amid widespread suspicion that Red Bull Racing had been using a form of mechanical active-suspension to alter its ride height between qualifying and the race, the FIA wrote to teams after the Malaysian Grand Prix to make it clear that such a concept was deemed illegal.

The FIA's move prompted McLaren to abandon plans it had to introduce its own system to adjust ride height, amid talk of the governing body ending an expensive development push for complicated suspension systems by allowing teams to make a single change to their cars between qualifying and the race.

Horner has said, however, that he thinks the FIA's recent clarification is enough to bring the matter to a head - with him reckoning Ferrari is now the only team bothering to change its ride height - which it can do during pitstops through a dial on the side of the car.

When asked by the BBC if he would support a move to allow freedom to change ride heights between qualifying and the race, Horner said: "Why? One of the things that we have developed hard over the winter was a car that performs over a multitude of ride heights.

"The fact that we can run a high ride height and have a good car for qualifying is testament to the good job that the aerodynamicists have done over the winter.

"I don't believe any team other than Ferrari has a system that they can change [the ride height] at the pitstop.

"I can't see any point in changing it. The rules make sense and the FIA has now cleared them up. It saves us a load of money in creating a system that manipulates the ride heights."

Although Red Bull Racing has been on the receiving end of accusations about its suspension design, Horner actually thinks the whole issue has been a compliment to the speed of his RB6.

"It is great isn't it?" he said about the controversy. "This story has generated so many column inches and it all came about from Mark Webber running wide in Bahrain qualifying and a spark coming up from underneath his car.

"Suddenly we had a ride height control because people could not believe the lap times that the car was doing. We take it as a back handed compliment.

"The car is the same as it has been for the first three grands prix mechanically, there is no ride height control system on our car, there never has been, and it is a back handed compliment that the guys are doing a great job. It won't have any effect on us here, because it has quite simply never existed. It is amazing how excited people get about these things."

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