Tremendous Variation and Ingenious Solutions – Lessons From The First Week of 2022 Launches

A front view of the VF-22 showing the sidepods and undercut

The designs of the Haas VF-22, Aston Martin AMR22 and McLaren MCL36 are very different—much more so than was the case between cars at the end of last year’s championship. The most obvious visual difference is in how each of the teams has rearranged their cooling packages—which has had a profound effect on the shape of their bodywork. This can be seen particularly in each car’s side pods and engine covers.

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What is clear between the three of them is that there is now less scope to have the dramatic undercut and downward-sloping sidepods, which had become the norm in the last two or three seasons.

There are three main reasons for this:

  • The new floor venturi tunnels which account for around 50% of the car’s total downforce take up space at the front of the sidepods, which was previously reserved for cooling apparatus.
  • The wheelbases of the cars are now regulated and must be between 3460-3600mm. The upper limit is shorter than even the shortest 2021 car. So there is less length in which to fit the radiators and their cooling channels.
  • There is probably less performance authority in the airflow around the sidepods than was the case under the previous regulations.

Side view of the McLaren MCL36

 


Side view of the Haas VF-22

 


Side view of the Aston Martin AMR22

There are two main routes for accelerating the airflow around the sidepod so that it arrives over the diffuser at as high a speed as possible (to better scavenge the under-body airflow).

The first is to undercut the sidepod, scalloping out a reverse S shape when looked at straight-on. This induces an air pressure change which accelerates the flow. The second is to ramp the sidepod sharply down in profile. Most sidepods of the last few years had both features.

We can see on the Haas a mild undercut and mild downward ramp, but nowhere near as extreme as was typical of previous-generation cars.

A front view of the VF-22 showing the sidepods and undercut

We can see on the Aston Martin a radical solution to retain both an extreme undercut and a significant downward ramp – the lifting of the whole cooling system, including radiators.

But it has entailed keeping the whole of the upper bodywork very wide down the length of the car between the cockpit and rear wing, with none of the traditional teardrop shapes in plain view.

comparison of the Aston Martin (top) and Haas (bottom) showing the different sidepod profiles

McLaren has done something yet different again, appearing to locate some radiator area in the engine cover in the space behind the roll hoop, much as Alpine did last year.

This has allowed the team to retain a generously accentuated ‘coke bottle’ profile in the lower bodywork, but there is hardly any undercut in the sidepods.

An overhead comparison between the Aston Martin (top) and McLaren (below) shows dramatically different profiles surrounding the engine

Written by John N

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