Red Bull will switch back to a conventional rear wing for this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix after Max Verstappen’s high-speed crashes at the British Grand Prix and in Austrian GP qualifying, which were linked to its rotating-wing concept. Team principal Laurent Mekies confirmed to BBC Sport that post-Silverstone testing revealed a problem, with the wing’s return to cornering mode causing an aerodynamic disruption. Verstappen called the situation “super-dangerous”.

Aston Martin chief trackside officer Mike Krack says Spa-Francorchamps is likely to be the team’s worst circuit of the year, agreeing with Lance Stroll’s assessment ahead of the Belgian Grand Prix. Krack said: "Yes, I think we know the sensitivities of this circuit for the various parameters of the car, and I think I have to agree with Lance. It's not only the lap length that we will suffer from, but also the character. So I think we can expect that."

Several drivers believe the Belgian Grand Prix’s rain forecast could bring Formula 1’s first properly representative wet running of 2026, exposing uncertainty over how the new tyres and power units will perform in such conditions. Lewis Hamilton, who tested the 2026 Ferrari in the wet at Fiorano, said the wet tyres “don’t work” and argued that the FIA’s decision to raise intermediate blanket temperatures and permit limited heating of the full wets is “still not enough.” Pierre Gasly warned that other drivers “are gonna be shocked,” while Oscar Piastri and Fernando Alonso highlighted unpredictable energy deployment as another potential problem.
McLaren boss Andrea Stella says the “energy starvation” expected at Spa-Francorchamps could produce “quite exciting racing” at this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix, with drivers needing to manage energy deployment around the long straights. Stella said: "I think we will see quite exciting racing when it comes to overtaking because of the deployment for the same reason of energy starvation at Silverstone."




Aston Martin says it may be short on spare parts when it debuts its overhauled ‘B-spec’ AMR26 at the Hungarian Grand Prix, after pushing production sign-off deadlines late in a bid to maximise performance. Chief trackside officer Mike Krack said it was “the $1million question” whether it will have enough spares for both cars, adding: “I think we will have two cars ready to go… Now I don't think we will have five spares of each.” He said contingency plans are in place if some components do not arrive in time.



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