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Mercedes leads major upgrade wave ahead of Canadian Grand Prix
22 May 2026PlanetF1AnalysisPreview

Mercedes leads major upgrade wave ahead of Canadian Grand Prix

Mercedes brings its first major upgrade package of the season with eight changes, while McLaren, Red Bull, and others also roll out updates. Ferrari and Aston Martin skip any changes.

Mercedes has brought its first major upgrade package of the season for the Canadian Grand Prix, with eight alterations on the W17. The team delayed its changes while most rivals introduced theirs at Miami, and now joins a wave of improvements that could reshape the midfield pecking order on a track demanding low-speed grip and braking stability.

Why it matters:

Canada often acts as a development inflection point. Even small gains in downforce or cooling can shift competitive positions, especially with regulations stable. Mercedes' delayed package signals a strategic push to close the gap, while teams like McLaren and Red Bull aim to consolidate their early-season form.

The details:

  • Mercedes (8 changes): Revised front wing outboard elements, floor reprofiling, and rear corner winglets to improve flow robustness and downforce. Circuit-specific brake cooling inlets added for Montreal's heavy braking zones.
  • McLaren (7 changes): New front wing for better flow conditioning, revised bodywork with additional cooling exits, and modifications to the floor edge and rear wing endplate to increase local load.
  • Red Bull (4 changes): Front wing flap revisions adjust aero balance; new floor bib edge and forward devices increase camber and local load. Brake duct geometry updated for cooling.
  • Haas (5 changes): Revised sidepod inlet, floor geometry with more aggressive diffuser, and rear suspension fairing optimization for improved flow conditioning.
  • Other teams (Williams, Racing Bulls, Audi, Alpine, Cadillac) each bring 2-4 updates focused on cooling, floor efficiency, or rear wing load. Ferrari and Aston Martin have no upgrades this weekend.

What's next:

How these parts perform in free practice and qualifying will determine whether the development race tightens or widens. With Ferrari standing still, the gap at the front could shift, and the Canadian Grand Prix may provide the clearest picture yet of the 2026 pecking order.

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