Ferrari floor, Suzuka, 2022

Half of F1 teams bring updates for Japanese Grand Prix

2022 Japanese Grand Prix

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With the Japanese Grand Prix following just one week after the preceding round in Singapore, only half the teams have brought new parts this weekend, and the changes are mostly minor.

Suzuka is a circuit which requires plenty of downforce for the sinuous opening sectors, but not at the expense of drag, or there is a price to be paid on the long straights which bring the cars back to the start/finish line. Efficient downforce is the gain teams are seeking.

This can be seen in AlphaTauri’s subtle rear wing tweak, designed to increase downforce with a minimal drag penalty. Aston Martin have revised the beam wing in the same area of the car to reduce draft. Williams are seeking similar gains around the entrance to their sidepods.

One of the most significant changes is on the Alfa Romeo. The team has brought a new front wing this weekend which it expects will improve its aerodynamic performance across the remaining races of 2022. After Aston Martin’s points haul in Singapore, Alfa Romeo will be hoping this can ensure they stay ahead of the green cars until the end of the season.

The only front-running team to have brought upgrades to this race is Ferrari, which has made minor alterations to its floor.

Among those who haven’t brought anything new to Suzuka are front-runners Red Bull and Mercedes. McLaren, who fitted a package of new parts to Lando Norris’s car last week, has brought the same upgrades for his team mate Daniel Ricciardo in Japan.

Having debuted a major floor upgrade in Singapore, Alpine have made no changes this week. Nor has Haas upgraded its VF-22 this weekend.

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2022 Japanese Grand Prix F1 teams’ updates

Ferrari

Ferrari floor, Suzuka, 2022
Ferrari floor, Suzuka, 2022

Updated component: Floor body
Primary reason for update: Performance – local load
Geometric differences compared to previous version: “Updated front floor [and] rear floor geometries”
How the update works: “This new floor component is part of the standard development cycle and features minor revisions. It aims at improving the overall aerodynamic performance through the entire car operating envelope and not specific to Suzuka circuit.”

AlphaTauri

AlphaTauri rear wing, Suzuka, 2022
AlphaTauri rear wing, Suzuka, 2022

Updated component: Rear wing
Primary reason for update: Performance – local load
Geometric differences compared to previous version: “The tip of the rear wing for this event has been updated with a tighter transition to the endplate in front view and a larger cut out at the back in side view.”
How the update works: “The update increases the effective span of the rear wing and produces an efficient increase in the local downforce it generates.”

Aston Martin

Updated component: Beam wing
Primary reason for update: Performance – drag reduction
Geometric differences compared to previous version: “New smaller chord beam wing flap.”
How the update works: “Minor geometric changes applied to the beam wing in order to reduce rear wing load and manage drag at this particular circuit.”

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Williams

Williams sidepods, Suzuka, 2022
Williams sidepods, Suzuka, 2022

Updated component: Coke / engine cover
Primary reason for update: Circuit specific – cooling range
Geometric differences compared to previous version: “Narrower/smaller engine cover to suit requirements of Suzuka”
How the update works: “This update on the engine cover for Suzuka reduces the underbody flow to the radiators and results in a small reduction in drag.”

Alfa Romeo

Alfa Romeo front wing, Suzuka, 2022
Alfa Romeo front wing, Suzuka, 2022

Updated component: Front wing
Primary reason for update: Performance – local load
Geometric differences compared to previous version: Reprofiled front wing elements and attachment to the nose structure. “This is a significant update of the front wing that will help the team make a step forward.”
How the update works: “The new front wing and nosecone attachment will provide an improved overall aerodynamic performance, improving the balance of the car and helping the team in Suzuka and at the following races.”

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Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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8 comments on “Half of F1 teams bring updates for Japanese Grand Prix”

  1. Its a scandal! How dare they spend money on upgrades. They should be saving money, and spending less and less every year. Until eventually its a spec series like Indycar. But with DRS!

    *sarcasm warning* :-)

    1. Sarcasm maybe – but it’s still entirely possible to spend less AND have more technical diversity and innovation than they do now.
      AND closer/more competitive racing.

      All without being a spec series – or using DRS.

      1. I look forward to your explanation. You could be the salvation of Formula One.

        But I suspect you’re just blowing smoke.

        1. Coventry Climax
          7th October 2022, 21:56

          Or just smoking a blow.

        2. But I suspect you’re just blowing smoke.

          Or maybe just not so tied to history, tradition and manufacturers to the point that I would allow them to hold F1 back.
          It is really so hard to imagine an F1 that is run in a fundamentally different way, so as to produce a fundamentally different product? (ie Racing quality and engineering diversity rather than technical homogenisation and prioritising maximum profits.)

          Just about every major technical change in F1 in the last 25 years has involved increasing team and manufacturer power within F1’s management, reducing technical diversity and innovation, and mandating a product/result rather than merely utilising a framework that allows teams to come to their own unique solutions.

          My approach could be F1’s salvation – certainly on track – but not necessarily for the people currently milking it for profits.

  2. The fifth-to-last event yet teams still bring developments even though they generally wholly switch focus to the following season post-Monza at the latest.

    1. @jerejj Quite a few teams probably figure these developments translate to next year’s design. Or, alternatively, figured it was easy to apply their new solutions to this year’s car.

      Also, especially among the slow teams, a few good results now can make a huge difference to their WCC payout. Haas (34), Aston Martin (37) and Other Red Bull (34) will all be keen to take 7th this year. Even Alfa Romeo (52) isn’t out of reach, especially since they have scored just 1 (!) point since the Canadian Grand Prix in mid-June.

  3. No RBR upgrade?
    There was me expecting one funded on the other set of books :)

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