Races

Generator Multirotor Vermont tiny whoop scene builds a race hub

Generator Multirotor Vermont has 407 lifetime laps, 40 races and a schedule that keeps tiny whoop pilots coming back.

David Kumar··2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Generator Multirotor Vermont tiny whoop scene builds a race hub
Source: generatorvt.com

Generator Multirotor Vermont has moved well beyond a novelty indoor track. LiveFPV’s dashboard shows 407 lifetime laps, 16 practice sessions, 40 races, 20 entries and 4 events, the kind of paper trail that tells pilots this Burlington course is timed, repeatable and worth dialing in for.

That mattered on June 1, 2026, when Fly Eye listed Whoop Racing at Generator Multirotor Vermont on its 2026 event index and FPV Scores carried both practice results and pilots pages for the meet. For tiny whoop racers, those are the markers of a real race hub: a track with data, entries and enough continuity to study lines, traffic and setup changes from one visit to the next. LiveFPV marked the track offline when it was crawled, but the archive behind it showed a venue with enough history to shape how pilots approach race night.

The cadence has become part of the story. Vermont Drone and Generator described the site in 2018 as America’s first permanent indoor drone racing course, a permanent setup at Generator instead of the usual temporary build-and-teardown format. The original launch followed a successful test on May 1, 2018, then soft-launch races in June and July. At the time, free meetups and races were held the first Tuesday of each month at 6:30 p.m. at Generator, 40 Sears Lane in Burlington, Vermont 05401. A newer 2025 event page shifted the rhythm to the first Monday of every month from 6-10 p.m., with racing at $5 per person and spectators free, while Generator’s own description still points to free meetups and races at 6:30 p.m. on the first Tuesday.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That mix of permanence and repetition is what gives the Vermont scene utility for racers deciding where to fly this season. Tiny whoop racing rewards exacting setup work, from camera angle to prop choice to how a pilot manages traffic through tight indoor gates, and Generator now offers a place to test those decisions against a timing system rather than a casual fly-in. The broader ecosystem backs that up too: Tiny Whoop says the community includes more than 30,000 pilots, while MultiGP says it has over 30,000 registered pilots and 500 active chapters worldwide. AMA District 1’s New England chapter list shows Multirotor Vermont in Burlington with 24 members and 10 races, signaling a local program with real staying power in a sport that runs on repeat laps and repeat visits.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

Did this article answer your question?

Discussion

More Drone Racing News