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

What to watch out for at the 2026 Nurburgring 24 Hours

Feature
GT
What to watch out for at the 2026 Nurburgring 24 Hours

Nurburgring 24 Hours: Verstappen completes first night laps as rain disrupts running

GT
Nurburgring 24 Hours: Verstappen completes first night laps as rain disrupts running

Zak Brown writes to FIA over Mercedes-Alpine ownership concerns

Formula 1
Zak Brown writes to FIA over Mercedes-Alpine ownership concerns

Marini suggests new Safety Commission model amid poor rider turnout

MotoGP
Catalan GP
Marini suggests new Safety Commission model amid poor rider turnout

Higginson early leader as Autosport National Rankings returns for 2026

National
Higginson early leader as Autosport National Rankings returns for 2026

Verstappen third in opening Nurburgring 24 Hours session as Winward Mercedes leads

NLS
Verstappen third in opening Nurburgring 24 Hours session as Winward Mercedes leads

Exclusive: How Red Bull and Ford managed to build a competitive F1 engine straight away

Feature
Formula 1
Exclusive: How Red Bull and Ford managed to build a competitive F1 engine straight away

Watch LIVE: Nurburgring 24 Hours Qualifying 1 & 2

General
Watch LIVE: Nurburgring 24 Hours Qualifying 1 & 2

Tombazis: F1 will stick with current flexi front wing tests

Flexing front wings may have caused some controversy during the 2024 Formula 1 season, but the FIA is not planning any changes to its tests for next year

McLaren MCL38 front wing detail

McLaren MCL38 front wing detail

Photo by: Giorgio Piola

No changes will be made to front wing flex tests used in Formula 1 despite 2024's minor hubbub over flexing wings, according to FIA head of single-seater matters Nikolas Tombazis.

In response to a query made by Ferrari and Red Bull in 2024 concerning the flexibility of the front wings belonging to other teams, mainly McLaren and Mercedes, the FIA placed monitoring cameras on cars from the Belgian Grand Prix and beyond.

This was not with a view to changing the regulations in the short term, but as part of a fact-finding mission to determine what it should do with future iterations of the rules.

Watch: Ranking Autosport's Top 50 Drivers of 2024 - 30 to 21

In the meantime, the FIA had declared that it had no issue with the McLaren and Mercedes wings; as long as they passed the flex tests, then the governing body was happy.

But Tombazis explained that the difference in loading between each front wing on the grid made it difficult for the FIA to create a one-size-fits-all test to clamp down on any exploitation of aeroelasticity.

"We are pretty happy with what we've seen," Tombazis explained in an exclusive interview with Autosport. "I hasten to say that it's not a question always of being happy or not.

"It's also a question of whether you feel that a meaningful test can be made.

Ferrari SF-24 front wing detail

Ferrari SF-24 front wing detail

Photo by: Giorgio Piola

"One of the challenges in the front wing is that, compared to other parts of the car, the front wing loading is much more varied between cars in a given location and so on.

"So most tests relate to the load of a certain direction, certain position of application, certain magnitude must not produce a [certain] deformation.

"The most successful such tests imitate as much as possible what happens in real life with loads and, on the earlier wing for example, it's reasonably successful. On the front wing, the variety between cars would make that quite difficult."

Tombazis added that there had been no changes to the front wing flex tests since the current regulations were introduced in 2022 and, as part of that, it was not going to change tack for 2025.

Ferrari is already understood to have developed its own version of a flexing front wing over 2024, and this is also an opportunity afforded to Red Bull if it has not already created its own variant.

"Obviously, there was a lot of hoo-hah about it during the summer and early autumn," Tombazis added.

"We had made it quite clear to teams since 2022 at least, that we were not planning to introduce any further tests on the front wing and we stuck to that."

Read Also:
Previous article Levelling up – how Formula 1's global audience is opening the door to new partnerships
Next article The "self-fulfilling injury" in Williams's 2024 F1 crash-fest

Top Comments