What is porpoising in Formula 1?
Porpoising is an aerodynamic phenomenon in which a Formula 1 car bounces vertically on high-speed straights. It happens when the chassis gets too close to the asphalt through ground effect, suddenly loses downforce, rises, regenerates downforce, and drops again. The cycle repeats until braking.
Why porpoising appears
The term comes from porpoise, a cetacean that moves by leaping out of the water. The phenomenon became prominent under the 2022 regulations, which reintroduced ground effect to F1 after more than 40 years. Cars generate a large share of their downforce by pulling air under the floor. The closer to the ground, the more grip the car has... up to a critical point.
The physical sequence:
- The car drops at high speed thanks to ground-effect suction.
- Airflow under the floor stalls.
- Downforce is lost suddenly.
- The suspension pushes the car back up.
- Airflow restarts and the cycle begins again.
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Ver App GratisConsequences for the driver
- Physical pain: repeated impacts to the spine and neck. Several drivers reported injuries in 2022.
- Performance loss: the car bounces instead of running glued to the floor.
- Compromised vision: the driver's helmet oscillates on straights.
In 2022, Lewis Hamilton and George Russell said they could not walk normally after some races.
How teams have solved it
| Solution | Effect |
|---|---|
| Raising ride height | Reduces bounce but also downforce |
| Stiffer floor | Less flex, less oscillation |
| Firmer suspension | Contains the vertical cycle |
| FIA technical directive (2022) | Limit on allowed vertical oscillation |
For the 2026 season, with the new active aerodynamics regulations that replaced DRS, porpoising is much less visible thanks to X and Z modes that adjust downforce by track zone.
Frequently asked questions
Since when has porpoising existed in F1? The phenomenon has existed since the 1970s with original ground effect, but it came back strongly in 2022.
Do all cars suffer from it? Not equally. In 2022 Mercedes was the most affected; Red Bull and Ferrari handled it better.
Is porpoising dangerous? It can cause cervical injuries and extreme fatigue, which is why the FIA intervened with technical directives.
Is it the same as bouncing? No. Bouncing is caused by kerbs or bumps; porpoising is purely aerodynamic.
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