Red Bull again featured on the podium on Sunday, with Daniel Ricciardo splitting the Silver Arrows in Belgium to help his team pull further ahead of Ferrari in the fight for second place in the constructors’ championship. But what was the secret of their Spa-Francorchamps success?
Red Bull were the only team to opt for a very low-downforce set-up. In the drawing above we see the rear wing was even smaller than the one they used for the Russian race in Sochi. The main plane and flap have a shorter chord and a lower angle of incidence, whilst on the endplates the diagonal strakes have been removed - all reducing downforce and cutting drag.

It was a similar story with the front wing, as shown in the drawing above. For Spa, Red Bull brought back the experimental design tested briefly earlier this year in China, when it featured a serrated second flap (red arrow, left). Here it was reintroduced with a shorter chord to the final flap (red arrows) and minus the serration. Both Ricciardo and team mate Max Verstappen had this configuration for qualifying and race.
Next Up
Related Articles
F1 AcademyHaas name Countryman as 2026 F1 ACADEMY driver
An exclusive look into Pierre Gasly's off-track life
Brown insists McLaren ‘won’t change the way we race’
Honda reveal details around power unit launch
GALLERY: Check out renders of the innovative 2026 car
Beyond The GridThe best of 2025, from Norris’ evolution to Brad Pitt’s ‘need for speed’
