Domain changed to archive.palanq.win . Feb 14-25 still awaits import.
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No.1728458 View ViewReplyOriginalReport
Human piloted drine racing coming in the next couple of years. With this competition eVTOL/personal aircraft tech in both the sporting and consumer spheres will advance significantly.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=61&v=VgBegdGyUis&feature=emb_title

>Australian startup Alauda Racing has officially started racing its Airspeeder electric flying cars.

>The company set two teams against each other in a drag race in the Australian desert — the first of many events still to come, it says.

>The slick, aerodynamic cars, both the Airspeeder Mk3 model that was unveiled back in June, sped along a predetermined path and reached speeds of over 96 mph during the video.

>While the cars were still being controlled remotely by pilots back on the ground, it’s an exhilarating demonstration and a small taste of what’s still in store: honest-to-goodness, human piloted flying car racing — which could very well turn out to be the future of motorsports.

>Alauda Racing is now looking to organize an entire tournament called EXA, pitting several teams against each other, as seen in a flashy teaser video.

>The company is also hard at work developing the Mk4, its first human piloted racing car, which is slated to make its debut some time next year.

>The cars can accelerate from 0 to 62 mph in just 2.3 seconds, which is hypercar territory. They also only weigh 220 pounds apiece thanks to a carbon fiber fuselage.

>To ensure human pilots don’t get hurt, Alauda Racing is looking to use LiDAR and other radar technologies to create “virtual forcefields” around each car. The technology could also allow “really close quarter motorsport action,” according to a recent explainer video.