FPV Drone Perfectly Captures F1 Speed: Hamilton vs. Verstappen at the Austrian Grand Prix
At the F1 Austrian Grand Prix, a camera crew deployed an FPV racing drone to chase Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen through the circuit, delivering never-before-seen footage of the two rivals at over 300 km/h. The video quickly went viral on social media, showcasing FPV technology's growing role in elite motorsport coverage.

Highlights
- An FPV drone crew filmed Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen racing at over 300 km/h at the F1 Austrian Grand Prix, producing viral social media footage.
- FPV (First Person View) drones are piloted via head-mounted displays in real time, enabling them to track F1 cars through corners with agility no helicopter or fixed camera can match.
- The footage highlights the growing maturity of FPV cinematography technology and its expanding application in elite motorsport broadcasting.
- The Hamilton–Verstappen rivalry at the Austrian Grand Prix provided the high-profile subject matter that amplified the video's global reach on social media.
FPV Drone Perfectly Captures F1 Speed at the Austrian Grand Prix
If you want to truly feel the raw velocity of a Formula 1 car, few tools can match an FPV racing drone.
At this year's F1 Austrian Grand Prix, a dedicated camera crew deployed an FPV drone directly onto the circuit, locking onto seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton and reigning champion Max Verstappen as the two traded positions in a wheel-to-wheel battle. The resulting footage spread rapidly across social media, giving fans around the world an unprecedented perspective on just how fast these machines travel.
Why FPV Drones Are Ideal for F1 Coverage
FPV (First Person View) drones are prized for their exceptional agility and speed responsiveness. Pilots control the aircraft in real time through a head-mounted display, allowing them to hug the racing line and dart through corners with a fluidity that no fixed camera or helicopter can replicate.
F1 cars regularly exceed 300 km/h on the straights. Keeping an FPV drone glued to a car at that speed while maintaining stable, broadcast-quality footage is a serious test of both pilot skill and modern drone hardware — and the Austrian Grand Prix footage demonstrated that today's FPV systems are more than up to the challenge.
Hamilton vs. Verstappen: A Rivalry Made for the Camera
The on-track battle between Hamilton and Verstappen has been one of the defining storylines of the F1 season, and the Austrian Grand Prix was no exception. Captured through the kinetic, low-angle lens of an FPV drone, their duel took on an intensity that traditional broadcast cameras struggle to convey — putting viewers almost inside the cockpit as the cars swept through high-speed corners.
The growing sophistication of FPV cinematography is quietly reshaping how motorsport is presented to audiences. As pilots and equipment continue to improve, fans can expect even more immersive footage from the paddock in the races to come.
Content sourced from social media posts related to this event.
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