How drone racing promotes battlefield FPV capability

The Australian Defence Force is a global leader in first-person view (FPV) drone racing, a sport that has attracted public attention and gone viral on social media. The ADF’s success in the field demonstrates how competitive military sport can be used to advance dual-use technology and nurture technological skills in the next generation.

Military capability and military sport have been linked for millennia, with soldiers competing in events such as the Olympic Pentathlon and the Military World Games to develop their skills in peacetime. Today, militaries use sports to forge international relationships, a key application of soft power.

FPV drone racing, one of the most recent examples of military sports, has emerged as a form of honing skills for a disruptive battlefield technology that can quickly enhance the situational awareness and firepower of individual soldiers and small combat elements. The little aircraft are cheaper and require less training than do more complex military-specification precision-guided weapons and autonomous systems.

Commercial camera drones and FPV drone racing were at first adapted for the battlefield by the Ukrainian military in response to shortage of precision-guided munitions and artillery rounds. The affordability, accessibility and ease of designing, building and flying drones have proliferated their use in conventional battlefield applications. They are effective as tools for disruption and provide opportunities for innovation to maintain combat advantage.

The Australian Army and British Army collaborated to assemble the first military drone racing teams in 2017 and 2018, and the inaugural Military International Drone Racing Tournament was held in Sydney in 2018. Since then, the ADF’s FPV drone racing pilots have remained undefeated, with consecutive wins in 2018, 2023 and 2024. The tournament brings together military FPV drone practitioners from around the world with the highest skills in designing, building and flying FPV racing drones. They compete in drone design, technology, pilot skills and teamwork. Most participating nations now have full-time pilots developing their military tactics, techniques and procedures; some of them are involved in the racing.

The ADF’s commitment to promoting FPV drone racing is enthusiastic, with its hashtag #SendIt! going viral across the movement. Its initiation of the international tournament in 2018 and the establishment of the ADF Drone Racing Association in 2023 are clear demonstrations of this commitment.

These initiatives illustrate how military sports programs can support the evolution of warfighting techniques and technology. They help ensure that ADF personnel remain competitive in drone racing, and have opportunities to learn and practise designing, building, flying, and repairing drones.

Racing tournaments encourage pilots to innovate in the quest for a drone design that delivers a winning performance. In many ways, the technology involved in FPV drone racing is an innovative application of the technology made affordable by commercial smartphones. Smartphone technology includes miniaturised batteries, microprocessors, high-definition cameras, small monitors, network communications and gyro-stabilised gravimeters. FPV racing drones are assembled from micro electric motors, electronic speed controllers, radio receivers, video transmitters, cameras and a flight controller integrated into a carbon fibre quadcopter frame. Thanks to the diversity of available components, racing pilots can hone their preferences for the most effective brands, software and technologies.

Drone racing tournaments also help pilots develop their flying skills. During a race, pilots control their custom-built FPV racing drones around a 3D obstacle racetrack. They wear FPV goggles to see the live video from the drone’s forward-facing camera and remotely manoeuvre the drone using electronic and radiofrequency systems. The video gives pilots an immersive experience so that they can see and understand where the drone needs to go. They decide on the flight control actions required to complete the race, sometimes recovering from unplanned mid-air collisions with other drones, the race gates and the ground.

Through its creation of FPV drone racing associations, the ADF is also highlighting the importance of building drones as a key skill that future generations should learn through science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) outreach programs. The pilots and teams visit schools, demonstrate at science festivals, career expos and airshows, and run drone racing boot camps for the ADF’s cadet and training organisations. Their message is clear: all STEM skills are required across the entire ADF, not just in drone operations.

While the ADF’s drone racing champions appear to simply relish winning at the sport, the main mission of the team lies in the innovation of drone technology and its application to the battlefield. The pilots’ success demonstrates how competitive military sports can be utilised to advance dual-use technology and promote STEM within the next generation, fostering innovation and disruptive thinking in current and future drone experts. #SendIt!