Motorcycle Racing

Alpine to bring new F1 rear wing to Spanish GP

Alpine A522 rear wing

The French manufacturer has shown some encouraging pace throughout the start of the 2022 F1 campaign, but a run of reliability problems and bad luck has hurt its points-scoring opportunities.

The team is confident however that it has a package capable of regularly fighting towards the front of the midfield pack.

With a lot of squads bringing planned developments for Spain, Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer has revealed that the most notable upgrade for its A522 will be at the back of the car.

“We’ve got a new rear wing coming for Spain,” he said.

“It should be more efficient than the last time we ran there and it should be a little bit more performant, so we will have that for both cars.”

Alpine has been innovative with its rear wing concept so far this season, returning in Miami to a design it first put to good use at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

Its novel design solution might garner attention from some of its rivals, given it reverses a design trend that has been used for many years. 

The wing features a section of bodywork that has been patched into the upper rear corner of the endplate (red arrow).

Alpine A522 rear wing

Photo by: Giorgio Piola

Usually, teams use a cut-out here to disrupt the vortex that’s generated as pressure gradients collide at the endplate and flap juncture. 

But conventional wisdom can be set aside when considering the role that the new rolled endplate juncture design has on the designer’s choices, given the vortex will be altered by it. 

There must also be some consideration made about how this also affects DRS when it’s deployed, with the split in the flap now further inboard than the designers had become accustomed to.

As well as straight aerodynamic improvements, Alpine is also pushing hard to reduce weight – with a majority of teams struggling on this front in 2022.

Alpine sporting director Alan Permane said the team had made good gains on this front with changes introduced at Imola, but it…

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