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F1 Teams Fit Monaco‑Only Winglets to Exploit Deactivated Straight Mode

Practice running will decide whether the added winglets give measurable rear grip by boosting diffuser suction.

Overview

  • Multiple teams introduced bespoke winglets in the rear‑wing actuator area on Thursday as the Straight Mode actuator is not used in Monaco, freeing that regulated space for passive aero parts.
  • Red Bull drew early attention with two small flaps on the actuator housing and Mercedes followed with a much denser cascade of stacked winglets and Gurney flaps around the central pylon.
  • The parts aim to add direct downforce and create upwash into the diffuser so the underbody sees more suction, a trade that is acceptable at Monaco because its straights are very short and top speed is less important.
  • Teams will validate the designs in practice on Friday by measuring lap time, balance and driver feedback before deciding whether to run the parts in sessions or remove them.
  • This episode highlights how a Monaco‑only rule window can open a design opportunity: the actuator box is a fixed regulatory volume that teams can repurpose when active aero is disabled.