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Drone racing is a wild and crazy ride for big money – CNET
Portrait of a drone pilot
A drone pilot’s equipment is pretty simple: a headset shows a first person point-of-view video stream from their drone. The pilot uses the video stream to steer and maneuver the drone through turns and gates on the race course.
We attended the California Drone Speed Challenge at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco to get some insight on what it means to be a drone pilot.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
What a drone pilot sees
This is what a pilot sees during a race.
Photo by: Patrick Holland/CNET
Race course
Here’s part of the race course. Rope lights indicate the path. In the middle is a rectangular cage where the drone pilots sit while they compete against each other.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
Race cage
Two pilots compete head-to-head during a qualifying heat.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
The starting line
A pilot places his drone on the starting block.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
It’s going for speed
A drone on its starting block ready to launch.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
The start of a drone race
The two small upright black rectangles on the bottom of the photo are the starting blocks. The blurry colorful streaks are the drones taking off at the start of a race.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
They deftly maneuver and muscle for rank
Two drones take off and race through the course.
Photo by: Patrick Holland/CNET
No tickets were issued
The only citations issued were accolades for how fast the drones were flying. The officer clocked one drone flying 103 miles-per-hour.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
DIY drones
Racer Tony Thompson readies his drone for a qualifying heat. There are few actual restrictions about the drones. For this race, propellors had to be less than 6-inches in diameter and batteries had to be under a certain power rating.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
Propellor repair
Racing drones can take quite a beating (which can be fun to watch as a spectator). But this also means pilots need to be able to quickly repair their drones between heats.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
Let there be light
All racing drones have an LED lights which makes them easier to follow as they speed through the course.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
Netting a couple of drones
Two drones hang on the safety netting that surround the pilots’ pit area. You do not want to get hit by a drone going 103 miles-per-hour.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
Big money, red jacket
Pilots in the Xfinity California Drone Speed Challenge compete for part of a $10,000 prize. But they all get these sweet red jackets.
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
Yep, it’s fun
Photo by: Josh Miller/CNET
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Published at Sun, 23 Jul 2017 12:00:21 +0000