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Alpine A522

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Alpine A522
Fernando Alonso in the Alpine A522 at the British Grand Prix
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorAlpine
DesignersPat Fry (Chief Technical Officer)
Matt Harman (Technical Director)
Naoki Tokunaga (Chief Transformation Officer)
Simon Virrill (Chief Designer)
Steve Booth (Chief Engineer)
Pierre Genon (Head of Performance Systems)
Dirk de Beer (Head of Aerodynamics)
James Rodgers (Chief Aerodynamicist)
Bruno Famin (Engine Technical Director)
PredecessorAlpine A521
SuccessorAlpine A523
Technical specifications
Suspension (front)Double wishbone push-rod
Suspension (rear)Double wishbone pull-rod
EngineMecachrome-built and assembled Renault E-Tech RE22
1.6 L (98 cu in) direct injection V6 turbocharged engine limited to 15,000 RPM in a mid-mounted, rear-wheel drive layout 1.6 L (98 cu in) Turbo Rear-mid mounted
Electric motorKinetic and thermal energy recovery systems
PowerMore than 950 hp (710 kW)[1]
FuelBP[2]
LubricantsCastrol[2]
Tyres
Competition history
Notable entrantsBWT Alpine F1 Team
Notable drivers14. Spain Fernando Alonso
31. France Esteban Ocon
Debut2022 Bahrain Grand Prix
Last event2022 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
RacesWinsPodiumsPolesF/Laps
220000

The Alpine A522 is a Formula One car designed and constructed by the BWT Alpine F1 Team and competed in the 2022 Formula One World Championship. The car was driven by Fernando Alonso and Esteban Ocon. The chassis is Alpine's first car under the 2022 technical regulations.[3]

Competition history

[edit]
Alonso at the Spanish Grand Prix

The car was generally about as competitive as its predecessor, the A521, and was regularly in the hunt for points at races, but not usually troubling the top teams. One of the car's key strengths is its top speed, which was particularly evident in races such as Baku, where it was noted that other cars could not catch the A522 on the straightaways, despite the advantage of DRS. The team had reliability problems in several races, however the team beat McLaren to 4th in the constructors' championship - their best finish since 2018.

Sponsorship and livery

[edit]
The "pink" livery of the A522 on display during the Silverstone Classic

To mark the start of the sponsorship deal between Alpine and BWT, the A522 competed in the first two races of the season, in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, in pink livery, completely replacing the usual blue livery.[4]

Racing Pride

[edit]

In June 2022, Racing Pride announced a partnership with Alpine, which saw Racing Pride work with Alpine on a number of initiatives to ensure their pathways for attracting emerging talent are welcoming to LGBTQ+ people, and the team pledged to show support and raise awareness and for the LGBTQ+ community.[5] Coinciding with Pride Month 2022, the Formula 1 team also ran a special pride livery on their Alpine cars throughout the month of June,[6] with other nods to the LGBTQ+ community throughout the team's sites.

Alpine CEO Laurent Rossi said of the partnership: "For so long, motorsport has not been representative of the diversity we see in wider society. There are various reasons, but we need to look forward and challenge the biases we see. Our journey starts here. The LGBTQ+ community has lacked visible representation and support within our industry, and we need to change this. We want Alpine to be an open, inclusive and productive place to work and for our employees to feel happy and supported in their workplace. A happy environment gives greater creativity and that is exactly what we need to foster as we move forward. To do so, we need to fully understand the challenges some of the under-represented groups in motorsport face. Pride Month is a good place to start; we know that we need to do more to give this community a voice and representation.".[5]

Complete Formula One results

[edit]
Key
Key
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Other points position
Blue Other classified position
Not classified, finished (NC)
Purple Not classified, retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrawn (WD)
Did not enter (empty cell)
Annotation Meaning
P Pole position
F Fastest lap
Superscript
number
Points-scoring position
in sprint
Year Entrant Power unit Tyres Driver name Grands Prix Points WCC pos.
BHR SAU AUS EMI MIA ESP MON AZE CAN GBR AUT FRA HUN BEL NED ITA SIN JPN USA MXC SAP ABU
2022 BWT Alpine F1 Team Renault E-Tech RE22 P Spain Fernando Alonso 9 Ret 17 Ret 11 9 7 7 9 5 10 6 8 5 6 Ret Ret 7 7 19† 5 Ret 173 4th
France Esteban Ocon 7 6 7 14 8 7 12 10 6 Ret 56 Race: 5; Sprint: 6 8 9 7 9 11 Ret 4 11 8 8 7
Reference:[7][8]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Alpine A522 is a Formula One car designed and constructed by the BWT Alpine F1 Team for the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship.[1] Featuring a carbon fibre monocoque chassis and powered by the Mecachrome-assembled Renault E-Tech RE22 1.6-litre V6 turbocharged hybrid power unit, the A522 incorporated a push-rod suspension at the front and pull-rod at the rear, with a raised nose relative to the front wing.[1] It was driven by Spaniard Fernando Alonso and Frenchman Esteban Ocon throughout the season.[2] The A522 demonstrated strong aerodynamic efficiency early in the season, enabling competitive straight-line speeds and points-scoring finishes in initial races, but suffered from reliability issues with the power unit that hampered later performance.[3][4] Despite these challenges and aggressive development pushes, including low-drag upgrades, the team secured fourth place in the Constructors' Championship with 173 points—Esteban Ocon tallying 92 for eighth in the Drivers' standings and Alonso 81 for ninth—edging out McLaren in a tight battle for best-of-the-rest positioning behind the dominant Mercedes, Ferrari, and Red Bull teams.[2][5] The car's design emphasized risk-taking in power unit mapping to extract performance, reflecting Alpine's strategy to rebound from prior stagnation, though without achieving podium finishes.[3][6]

Development and Design

Background and Objectives

The Alpine A522 was engineered in response to the FIA's overhaul of Formula One chassis regulations for the 2022 season, which mandated a return to ground-effect aerodynamics via underfloor venturi channels to produce downforce with reduced wake turbulence, thereby promoting overtaking by allowing cars to follow closer without significant aerodynamic disruption. This shift contrasted with the prior era's reliance on high-mounted rear wings and diffusers, necessitating a complete redesign of the car's floor, sidepods, and suspension geometry. Alpine's Enstone-based chassis team and Viry-Châtillon powertrain group dedicated 18 months to this effort, incorporating simplified external aero elements while optimizing the new 18-inch wheel and tire package for enhanced mechanical grip and safety.[7][8] The A522 built directly on the momentum from Alpine's 2021 rebranding from Renault, where the team secured fifth in the Constructors' Championship with 91 points, aided by Fernando Alonso's return mid-season. As the first chassis fully realized under the Alpine banner amid this transition, the car integrated a revised Renault E-Tech RE22 power unit, which delivered measurable improvements in thermal efficiency and power deployment through targeted reductions in parasitic losses and heat rejection. Team principal Otmar Szafnauer highlighted the powertrain's evolution as a key enabler for chassis development under the cost cap constraints.[9][10] Alpine's primary objectives for the A522 focused on consolidating midfield strength, with CEO Laurent Rossi setting a baseline target of at least fifth in the Constructors' standings to match or exceed 2021 results, prioritizing consistent point-scoring over sporadic peaks. The team anticipated podium potential from the regulatory reset, leveraging the Alonso-Ocon lineup's synergy—Alonso's tactical acumen complemented by Ocon's consistency—to exploit any early-season parity among midfield rivals. This approach aligned with broader Renault Group ambitions to position Alpine as a long-term challenger, though Rossi stressed adaptability to the unproven aero concepts amid wind tunnel correlation challenges faced industry-wide.[11][12]

Chassis and Aerodynamic Features

The chassis of the Alpine A522 was constructed from a moulded carbon fibre and aluminium honeycomb composite monocoque, incorporating front and side impact structures to comply with FIA safety regulations.[13] This design provided the structural integrity required for the 795 kg minimum weight, including the driver, while optimizing weight distribution for the ground-effect aerodynamics mandated by the 2022 technical rules.[14] Suspension geometry featured double wishbone setups with push-rod actuation at the front and pull-rod at the rear, allowing for precise camber and toe adjustments to suit varying track conditions and aerodynamic demands.[1] Aerodynamically, the A522 emphasized underbody downforce generation in line with the reintroduction of ground effects, featuring a slim nose with rounded sides to direct airflow efficiently onto the floor and away from the front wheels.[15] The sidepod design incorporated louvres and a downward ramp for cooling while maximizing the undercut volume to feed clean air to the floor edges and diffuser, reducing turbulence and enhancing overall efficiency.[15] [16] Throughout the season, aerodynamic refinements included a revised beam wing with reduced chord on the upper element to minimize drag and improve high-speed stability, as introduced at the Dutch Grand Prix on September 4, 2022.[17] These updates aimed to balance the car's initial aggressive floor design with better consistency in porpoising control and load distribution.[18]

Power Unit Integration

The Renault E-Tech RE22 power unit, a 1.6-liter V6 turbocharged hybrid engine, represented a full redesign for the 2022 Formula 1 season and served as the propulsion system for the Alpine A522.[8] This overhaul included a belated adoption of the split turbocharger layout—separating the compressor and turbine with exhaust routing through the center of the V—aimed at improving exhaust energy recovery and overall efficiency, though Renault trailed competitors who implemented similar concepts earlier.[19] The unit delivered measurable gains in horsepower over its predecessor, with Alpine technical director Matt Harman confirming "real gains" from the redesign, enabling better exploitation of the ground-effect aerodynamic regulations.[10] Integration of the RE22 into the A522 chassis emphasized compactness and structural synergy, with the power unit mounted as a fully stressed member to enhance the monocoque's rigidity while minimizing weight.[13] This packaging allowed the Enstone chassis team greater aerodynamic freedom, as the reduced footprint of the engine components—particularly around the turbo and energy recovery systems—freed up space for optimized airflow management over the sidepods and floor.[20] Harman highlighted improved collaboration between the Viry-Châtillon engine facility and Enstone aerodynamics group, which facilitated this tighter integration and contributed to the A522's early-season competitiveness against midfield rivals.[21] Cooling demands were addressed through refined ducting aligned with the power unit's layout, incorporating louvres and ramps in the engine cover to balance thermal management with drag reduction, though this sometimes compromised outright power output in high-temperature conditions.[15] Despite these advances, the RE22's performance lagged behind leading customer units like Mercedes and Honda in qualifying trims, with data indicating deficits of up to 20-30 kilowatts on straights, underscoring Renault's developmental risks in prioritizing reliability over peak output during homologation.[22]

Livery and Sponsorship

Primary Sponsors and Partnerships

The primary sponsorship for the Alpine team in 2022 came from BWT, an Austrian water treatment company, which became the title sponsor under a strategic long-term partnership announced on February 11, 2022. This deal rebranded the team as BWT Alpine F1 Team and incorporated BWT's pink branding into the A522's livery, particularly prominent during the first two races before reverting to a predominantly blue scheme. The partnership emphasized mutual commitments to innovation, sustainability, and performance optimization, including BWT's expertise in water management applied to team operations.[23] MAPFRE, a Spanish insurance multinational, acted as a key sponsor with its logo displayed prominently on the A522's sidepods, front wing endplates, and drivers' helmets throughout the season. This visibility underscored MAPFRE's status among the team's top commercial partners, supporting branding exposure across global races.[24] Additional significant partnerships included a multi-year apparel deal with Italian sportswear brand Kappa as the official team supplier, and an extension of the strategic alliance with Yahoo, which placed logos on the A522 chassis and team assets to enhance digital promotion. Binance entered as a partner for a fan token initiative, enabling blockchain-based engagement with supporters. These arrangements, alongside technical collaborations like Delphi Technologies for components, bolstered the team's commercial portfolio amid the 2022 regulatory changes.[25][26][27]

Livery Design and Evolution

The livery of the Alpine A522 was unveiled on 21 February 2022, featuring a predominantly blue color scheme inspired by the team's French heritage, accented with pink highlights to incorporate the branding of new title sponsor BWT, a water treatment company previously associated with Aston Martin.[28][29] For the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix and the subsequent Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, Alpine opted for a special predominantly pink variant of the livery to prominently showcase the BWT partnership, diverging from the standard design.[30][31] From the Australian Grand Prix onward, the team reverted to the primary blue-dominant livery with pink accents, which remained consistent throughout the rest of the 2022 season without additional modifications or special editions.[28][32]

2022 Season Participation

Pre-Season Testing and Shakedown

The A522 completed its first laps during the Formula 1 pre-season test at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya from 23 to 25 February 2022, immediately following its unveiling two days prior.[28] On the opening day, Fernando Alonso drove 127 laps and reported positive initial feedback on the car's balance and responsiveness during systems validation and setup optimization.[33] Esteban Ocon handled the second day, focusing on aerodynamic data collection and tire evaluation, though specific lap counts for his session were not publicly detailed beyond team aggregates.[34] The test concluded prematurely on day three when a hydraulic system failure on Alonso's car after only 12 laps triggered an onboard fire, prompting Alpine to withdraw entirely to prioritize repairs and analysis ahead of the Bahrain event.[35][36] Alpine resumed testing at the Bahrain International Circuit from 10 to 12 March 2022, the second and final official pre-season session, where the team emphasized reliability improvements and long-run simulations.[37] Esteban Ocon logged 111 laps on the second day, contributing to setup refinements under the desert conditions, while Fernando Alonso set the team's quickest time of 1:32.698 on the final day during qualifying simulation efforts.[38][39] Overall, the Bahrain test allowed Alpine to accumulate substantial mileage—exceeding 300 laps across both drivers—addressing Barcelona's setbacks and validating the ground-effect platform's baseline performance, though pace remained midfield-oriented compared to leading rivals like Ferrari and Mercedes.[37] No dedicated private shakedown runs were reported prior to Barcelona, with the A522's debut aligned directly with official testing protocols.[40]

Driver Lineup and Early Races

Esteban Ocon and Fernando Alonso formed the driver lineup for the Alpine A522 in the 2022 Formula One season. Ocon, a French driver who had joined the team in 2020, was retained as the lead racer, bringing continuity after his maiden victory at the 2021 Hungarian Grand Prix. Alonso, the Spanish two-time world champion, returned to the team—formerly branded as Renault—for his second consecutive year following a two-year retirement from F1, with his participation confirmed via a contract extension announced on August 26, 2021.[41][42] The season commenced at the Bahrain Grand Prix on March 20, 2022, where the A522 demonstrated midfield competitiveness. Ocon qualified fifth but incurred a five-second time penalty for causing a collision with Alexander Albon's Williams at Turn 4, dropping to seventh at the finish line for six points. Alonso started and finished ninth, contributing two points, as the team amassed eight points overall in fourth place among non-podium finishers.[43][44] In the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on March 27, 2022, Ocon advanced to sixth position, securing eight points amid a race marked by safety car interventions and on-track incidents. Alonso, however, classified outside the top 10 after a driveshaft failure, leaving the team with another eight points haul but highlighting emerging reliability concerns with the power unit.[45][44] The Australian Grand Prix on April 10, 2022, yielded six points for Alpine, with both drivers finishing in the points but struggling against faster midfield rivals like AlphaTauri and Ferrari in race trim. Ocon and Alonso's combined effort underscored the A522's straight-line speed potential on Albert Park's long straights, though tire management limited further gains, positioning the team provisionally fourth in the constructors' standings after three rounds.[44]

Mid-Season Performance and Upgrades

Alpine's mid-season performance with the A522 positioned the team as a strong midfield contender, consistently battling McLaren for fourth in the constructors' championship through aggressive development. By the summer break in August 2022, Alpine held fourth place with competitive results, including points finishes in high-speed circuits where the car's initial strengths shone, though upgrades targeted broader track versatility.[46] The team's strategy emphasized frequent, incremental aerodynamic updates rather than major overhauls, allowing sustained progress amid the cost cap constraints.[47] At the British Grand Prix on July 3, 2022, Alpine debuted significant upgrades to both A522 chassis, featuring revised floor and bodywork components to enhance rear airflow and downforce efficiency.[48] [49] Esteban Ocon noted these "fit and forget" parts, akin to Ferrari's reliable approach, provided marginal but traceable gains without reliability risks, including altered floor edges for improved suction and a new engine cover specification. These enhancements contributed to solid qualifying and race pace at Silverstone, where the car performed well in medium-to-high speed corners, helping secure points despite the intense midfield competition.[50] Further refinements followed at the French Grand Prix on July 24, 2022, with trials of a new floor flank on both cars during practice sessions to optimize underside airflow and edge vortex management.[51] Team principal Otmar Szafnauer confirmed this package as part of ongoing marginal improvements, focusing on isolating performance deltas over larger redesigns.[52] The updates yielded "real gains" in downforce without major disruptions, supporting Esteban Ocon's fourth-place finish and maintaining momentum in the P4 fight.[53] Earlier in the Spanish Grand Prix on May 22, 2022, a new rear wing was introduced to reduce drag and boost straight-line speed, aiding adaptation to varied cornering demands.[54] This upgrade cadence, totaling multiple packages by mid-season, differentiated Alpine from top teams conserving resources, enabling consistent midfield pace against rivals like AlphaTauri and Aston Martin.[18] Reliability remained a strength, with the A522's ground-effect design facilitating cost-effective iterations that preserved the power unit's competitive edge from its mid-2022 specification.[55] Overall, these developments solidified Alpine's reputation for development aggression, though gains were incremental and track-specific rather than transformative.[56]

Late-Season Results and Championship Standings

In the races following the summer break, the Alpine A522 demonstrated reliable point-scoring ability, particularly on circuits favoring its aerodynamic strengths, though reliability issues and variable driver form limited podium contention. At the Belgian Grand Prix on 28 August, Esteban Ocon finished sixth for eight points, while Fernando Alonso retired on lap 11 due to an engine failure after starting from ninth. The team rebounded at the Dutch Grand Prix on 4 September, where Alonso claimed fifth place (10 points) from 10th on the grid, and Ocon added one point in 10th despite a challenging race. Alpine's performance peaked in high-downforce venues later in the calendar. Ocon's fifth-place finish at the Italian Grand Prix on 11 September yielded 10 points, complemented by Alonso's eighth (four points), helping the team consolidate its midfield position. Double points hauls followed at the Japanese Grand Prix on 9 October (Ocon sixth for eight points, Alonso fifth for 10) and Abu Dhabi Grand Prix on 20 November (Ocon seventh for six, Alonso fifth for 10), with the A522's ground-effect setup proving effective in cooler conditions and tighter corners. Weaker showings included Singapore (2 October), where only Alonso scored four points in eighth amid wet-weather struggles, and Mexico (30 October), where Alonso's fifth (10 points) outshone Ocon's 13th.
Grand PrixDateOcon Position/PointsAlonso Position/Points
Belgium28 Aug6th / 8DNF / 0
Netherlands4 Sep10th / 15th / 10
Italy11 Sep5th / 108th / 4
Singapore2 Oct14th / 08th / 4
Japan9 Oct6th / 85th / 10
United States23 Oct12th / 06th / 8
Mexico30 Oct13th / 05th / 10
Brazil (incl. Sprint)13 Nov8th / 9 (5 sprint + 4 race)DNF / 6 (sprint)
Abu Dhabi20 Nov7th / 65th / 10
The Brazilian Grand Prix included sprint qualifying, where Ocon finished fifth (four points) and Alonso third (six points); Ocon added four points in the main race, but Alonso retired late due to mechanical failure. These efforts contributed to Alpine's late-season tally, underscoring the A522's evolution from early unpredictability to consistent midfield combat. Alpine concluded the 2022 Constructors' Championship in fourth place with 173 points, 240 behind Mercedes but 54 ahead of McLaren, marking the team's best finish since rebranding and validating its development focus amid regulatory transitions. In the Drivers' Championship, Ocon placed eighth with 92 points, edging Alonso's ninth-place 81 points—the first time a teammate outscored the two-time champion in a full season—reflecting Ocon's steadier finishes despite Alonso's qualifying edge in 13 of 22 races. This outcome highlighted the A522's potential but exposed gaps in outright pace against top teams, influencing Alpine's 2023 pivot to Mercedes power units.

Technical Performance and Analysis

Strengths in Ground-Effect Aerodynamics

The Alpine A522's ground-effect aerodynamics were characterized by an aggressive floor edge configuration that diverged from rivals' designs, prioritizing enhanced airflow sealing into the venturi tunnels to maximize underbody downforce. This setup allowed the car to generate substantial aerodynamic load at low ride heights, aligning with the 2022 regulations' emphasis on underfloor suction over overt wing dependency. Technical analyses noted the floor's shallow profile and wide extension toward the wing tips, which optimized pressure differentials beneath the chassis for efficient downforce production without compromising straight-line speed.[57][58] A key strength emerged in the A522's rapid mitigation of porpoising, the vertical oscillations triggered by aggressive ground-effect suction that affected many 2022 cars during high-speed straights. Following initial filming on February 23, 2022, Alpine engineers addressed the issue through targeted suspension adjustments and aerodynamic balancing by pre-season testing, enabling stable platform heights and consistent venturi performance. This avoided the exponential downforce spikes and stalls experienced by competitors, preserving tyre degradation and allowing reliable downforce delivery—evident in the car's podium contention at the Bahrain Grand Prix on March 20, 2022, where Esteban Ocon finished third.[59][60] Complementary features, such as undercut sidepods with downward ramps and a 15% smaller cooling package, accelerated clean airflow toward the diffuser, reducing drag while feeding the ground-effect system. These elements provided an aerodynamic sweet spot, as described in launch evaluations, yielding balanced efficiency on tracks like Miami International Autodrome, where the A522's underfloor grip supported strong qualifying and race pace in mid-season upgrades. Overall, these attributes positioned Alpine as a midfield leader early in the ground-effect era, with the team accumulating 173 constructors' points by season's end, largely attributable to aero stability over rivals' inconsistency.[15][20]

Reliability Issues and Weaknesses

The Alpine A522 encountered significant reliability challenges throughout the 2022 Formula 1 season, largely attributable to its Renault RS22 power unit, which underwent aggressive development to maximize performance output despite regulatory constraints limiting post-homologation changes to reliability fixes only.[3][22] Team principal Otmar Szafnauer acknowledged that the pursuit of additional horsepower—estimated at around 20-30 units over initial projections—introduced risks that manifested as frequent failures, including early dyno issues with fuel pumps that were partially mitigated but not fully resolved before racing commenced.[61][62] Pre-season testing highlighted these vulnerabilities, with Fernando Alonso halting a session on February 25, 2022, due to a hydraulic pressure loss that ended Alpine's Bahrain test prematurely.[36] During the season, power unit failures were recurrent, exemplified by both drivers retiring from the Singapore Grand Prix on September 2, 2022, after mechanical issues with the energy recovery system and related components.[63] Alonso alone suffered at least four engine-related retirements, including a notable failure in the Mexican Grand Prix on October 30, 2022, contributing to five total DNFs and underscoring a pattern of "luck of the draw" component degradations under high-stress conditions.[64][65] Water pump disintegration also forced an early exit for Alonso in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on March 27, 2022.[4] These incidents, more prevalent than among direct midfield rivals like McLaren, eroded Alpine's fourth-place constructors' standing, costing an estimated 20-30 points as the team expended resources on mid-season repairs rather than development.[62][66] The power unit's inherent weaknesses extended beyond reliability to outright performance deficits, with the Renault E-Tech unit delivering approximately 40-50 fewer kilowatts in qualifying trim compared to Mercedes or Ferrari equivalents, manifesting as straight-line speed disadvantages on tracks like Monza and Spa-Francorchamps.[62] Alpine's technical director later confirmed that incomplete validation processes, driven by late-stage architecture changes, amplified these vulnerabilities without allowance for retroactive power enhancements.[67] Remedies, such as redesigned water pumps and energy store overhauls, were deferred to 2023, as 2022 rules prohibited performance tweaks.[4][68]

Comparative Performance Against Rivals

The Alpine A522 propelled the team to fourth in the 2022 Constructors' Championship with 173 points, 14 points ahead of McLaren in fifth and decisively clear of lower midfield rivals Alfa Romeo and Aston Martin, both on 55 points.[69] This positioned Alpine as the strongest non-podium contender amid Red Bull's dominance (759 points), Ferrari's consistency (554 points), and Mercedes' recovery (413 points), though the A522's pace deficit to the leaders—rooted in inferior aerodynamic efficiency and power unit output—limited challenges to the top three.[69][70]
TeamPointsPosition
Red Bull7591st
Ferrari5542nd
Mercedes4133rd
Alpine1734th
McLaren1595th
Alfa Romeo556th
Aston Martin557th
Against McLaren's MCL36, the A522 exhibited versatile low-drag characteristics suited to high-speed tracks, enabling two main Grand Prix podiums—Fernando Alonso's third place in Miami on May 8 and Esteban Ocon's in Hungary on July 31—compared to McLaren's single podium via Norris in Saudi Arabia on March 27.[71] However, Renault power unit unreliability, including failures in Austria's sprint race (July 10) and Singapore (October 2), cost Alpine an estimated 50-70 points, more than most midfield peers, though aggressive aerodynamic upgrades at nearly every event—from sidepod refinements in Australia to floor optimizations in Silverstone—yielded late-season gains.[62][70] By the United States Grand Prix in October, Alpine's sporting director asserted the A522 held a pace edge over the MCL36, securing an 11-point lead after 19 races bolstered by Alonso's reinstated seventh place.[6][72] The A522's midfield prowess stemmed from effective ground-effect packaging but faltered in outright downforce and reliability against top rivals; it trailed Ferrari's straight-line speed and Red Bull's low-rake dominance while Mercedes overcame early porpoising issues that Alpine navigated adequately but without matching their tyre management.[70] Versus lower teams like AlphaTauri (35 points), the A522's consistent qualifying (average grid position around 8th) and race pace ensured dominance, underscoring its role as a reliable performer outside the elite tier despite internal setbacks.[69][62]

Results and Legacy

Statistical Summary

The Alpine A522 participated in all 22 Grands Prix of the 2022 Formula One World Championship, securing fourth place for the team in the Constructors' Championship with a total of 173 points.[69] Esteban Ocon contributed 92 points to finish eighth in the Drivers' Championship, while Fernando Alonso added 81 points for ninth place.[73]
Key Performance StatisticValue
Race Wins0
Podium Finishes0
Pole Positions0
Fastest Laps0
Best Race Result (Ocon)4th (multiple races, including Australia and Spain)
Best Race Result (Alonso)5th (multiple races, including Bahrain and Miami)

Impact on Team Strategy

The A522's competitive baseline under the new ground-effect regulations prompted Alpine to adopt an aggressive upgrade strategy, deploying over 15 major updates across the season, including sidepod revisions in early races, floor optimizations in Australia and Miami, and rear wing adjustments for low-drag tracks like Bahrain. This relentless iteration, supported by bolstered engineering resources at Enstone and a redesigned RE22 power unit, enabled the team to outperform expectations by securing fourth in the Constructors' Championship, validating a resource-intensive focus on in-season development rather than premature shifts to the 2023 project.[6] The car's power unit configuration, which prioritized output gains over reliability to exploit the development freeze until 2026, introduced strategic trade-offs, manifesting in mechanical failures such as cylinder issues that cost positions like Fernando Alonso's seventh place in Mexico. Team principal Otmar Szafnauer affirmed this approach as deliberate, arguing the performance edges justified the risks, with fixes implemented progressively to minimize long-term setbacks. Such decisions reinforced a philosophy of boundary-pushing in aero-mechanical integration, though they exposed vulnerabilities in slow-speed traction and durability that necessitated adaptive race strategies, including conservative setups on high-degradation circuits.[62] The A522's aero characteristics, particularly its efficiency in floor-generated downforce, elevated underbody development as a strategic cornerstone, with chief technical officer Pat Fry estimating its value at ten times that of front wing refinements under 2022 rules. This insight directed future R&D toward enhancing ground-effect stability, influencing the team's mid-season pivot from broad upgrades to targeted reliability mitigations and early 2023 prototyping by late 2022. Ultimately, the car's midfield leadership facilitated driver lineup transitions, including Alonso's exit and Oscar Piastri's integration, while underscoring the need for streamlined management to sustain momentum beyond initial regulatory gains.[74]

References

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