Tuesday, December 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Drone Racer Says Sport Better Version Of Formula One Racing

The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2016 10:51 AM
    VICTORIA — Andrew Meyer says he's chasing the future as he travels the world competing in drone racing events in what is one of the world's newest competitions.
     
    The 26-year-old university student from Port Alberni, B.C., is known in drone flying circles as Andrew "MayMayDay" Meyer.
     
    He's essentially grounded his education to fly drones at races in Canada, the United States, Dubai and South Korea, he said via Facebook on Friday from a highway rest stop near Seoul.
     
    Meyer was one of 15 international drone racers invited to South Korea's Chuncheon Drone Race World Cup last weekend. About 100 South Koreans also entered in the event at the 20,000-seat Chuncheon city stadium.
     
    He recently placed 10th at the 2016 U.S. National Drone Racing Championships in New York City and is entered in the Drone World Championship in Hawaii in October. He was a top competitor at Canada's Drone Nationals last year at Collingwood, Ont.
     
    "I love trying new things," said Meyer who has done his share of bungee jumps and sky dives in the past. "The freedom of flight has always been interesting to me."
     
    Drone racing started about four years ago, but it's only been in recent months where it's started to rise to prominence globally, with U.S. sports channel ESPN livestreaming the American nationals earlier this month and the World Drone Prix in Dubai offering $1 million in prizes.
     
    It's all part of the fast-growing world of drone racing, where participants don goggles that are linked to the drone's camera, giving them a live, first-person view as they weave their small aircraft around a race course at top speeds.
     
    "Anyone can put on goggles and feel exactly what the pilot's feeling," said Meyer. "You and thousands of people can be racing around the course through your drone. I think of drone racing as the better version of Formula One car racing."
     
     
    Meyer envisions a future drone-racing circuit similar to Grand Prix auto racing.
     
    He said racing drones takes more control skills than the everyday drones people use to explore their surroundings. Race drones are operated by successfully manipulating two joysticks that control speed and direction.
     
    Most races involve about 10 drones that whiz through on-the-ground obstacle courses of sorts at speeds of more than 100 kilometres an hour. The winners are usually either the pilots who complete the most laps in a set time or the ones with the fastest three consecutive laps.
     
    Meyer said he's hooked on drone racing and at the moment his quest for his master's degree in biomedical engineering is running a distance second in his life.
     
    "When I started my master's at the University of British Columbia the drone racing was only starting to get big," he said. "It was just a hobby for me. It's a fine balance now between my master's and the drone world. Fortunately, my professor is very understanding of what I'm doing with drones."
     
    Meyer said his university studies involve working with robotics to improve the accuracy of mobile X-ray machines used in orthopedic surgery.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Woman Arrested In Modesto With 38 Kilograms Of Heroin: Police

    Canadian Woman Arrested In Modesto With 38 Kilograms Of Heroin: Police
    63-year-old Kathleen Landry, of British Columbia, was arrested Monday on Highway 99 in Modesto.

    Canadian Woman Arrested In Modesto With 38 Kilograms Of Heroin: Police

    No Breaks From B.C.'s New Tax For Foreign Property Buyers With Deals: Minister

    No Breaks From B.C.'s New Tax For Foreign Property Buyers With Deals: Minister
    The tax takes effect next Tuesday and long-term contracts, such as pre-sale agreements for condos under construction, and pending property purchases involving foreign buyers will pay the new 15-per-cent tax.

    No Breaks From B.C.'s New Tax For Foreign Property Buyers With Deals: Minister

    Langley, B.C. Man Who Planned Arsons, Shootings At Family Homes To Be Sentenced

    Langley, B.C. Man Who Planned Arsons, Shootings At Family Homes To Be Sentenced
    Forty-three-year-old Vincent Cheung of Langley, B.C., pleaded guilty last week to 18 of 23 charges including arson and firearms offences stemming from attacks on 15 families in 2011 and 2012.

    Langley, B.C. Man Who Planned Arsons, Shootings At Family Homes To Be Sentenced

    Theft Of 8-Yr-Old Girl's iPad Results In The Arrest Of A Richmond Man

    Theft Of 8-Yr-Old Girl's iPad Results In The Arrest Of A Richmond Man
      The suspect, a 22 year old Richmond man who is previously known to police, opened his bag and relinquished the iPad to police. 

    Theft Of 8-Yr-Old Girl's iPad Results In The Arrest Of A Richmond Man

    B.C. Wants Federal Crackdown On Fentanyl Trafficking To Fight Health Emergency

    Premier Christy Clark wants the federal government to restrict access to devices, such as pill presses and tableting machines, and to pursue stronger penalties against people who import and traffic in fentanyl.

    B.C. Wants Federal Crackdown On Fentanyl Trafficking To Fight Health Emergency

    Jatinder 'Michael' Sandhu, Killed In Surrey Shooting Is Victim Of Mistaken Identity

    Jatinder 'Michael' Sandhu, Killed In Surrey Shooting Is Victim Of Mistaken Identity
    This is not a drug hit, not a gang-related hit, this is mistaken identity of an innocent victim

    Jatinder 'Michael' Sandhu, Killed In Surrey Shooting Is Victim Of Mistaken Identity