Outer Heaven Drone Racing’s ProSpec Round 6 turns on racecraft
Round 6 at Willmot put ProSpec’s capped-power format on display, with Outer Heaven framing the race as a test of clean lines, consistency and pressure handling.

Outer Heaven Drone Racing’s ProSpec Round 6 made its point before the first launch. At 8:00 a.m. on June 14, the Willmot circuit at 86 Palmyra Ave was set for a class where capped power, not brute acceleration, decided who could stay in the fight. The message from the club was plain: this was pure pressure, and the pilots who managed racecraft best would be the ones still standing.
That is what gives ProSpec its edge inside the sport. MultiGP describes Pro Spec as a distinct race class built around the exclusive MultiGP Pro Spec frame and specifications, and Outer Heaven leaned into that controlled format. On a day like this, the winner was more likely to come from clean lines, throttle discipline, and smart traffic management than from the biggest motor or the most aggressive tune. In a class built to level the hardware, one mistake could erase the advantage of raw pace.
Round 6 also sat inside a real championship arc rather than a stand-alone meet. FPVTrackside already had Round 7 scheduled for July 12, which turned the June race into a key checkpoint in the 2026 ProSpec run. Outer Heaven’s own archive showed how steady the season had been by then, with earlier ProSpec races on March 29, April 12 and May 17. The club was not improvising a one-off showcase. It was building a calendar where consistency mattered as much as speed.
That structure matters in western Sydney because Outer Heaven has become one of the region’s most established drone-racing hubs. MultiGP lists the chapter as active and describes it as a club with a large outdoor location in western Sydney and modern lap-timing equipment. Outer Heaven says it is the biggest Sydney-based drone racing club and that it operates under Drone Racing Australia with insurance coverage, details that help explain why the series can sustain a proper competitive rhythm across the season.

The significance of Round 6 was not just that another ProSpec race was held. It was that the class again rewarded the kind of pilot who can stay composed under capped-power conditions, choose the right line, and finish clean when others overreach. Outer Heaven’s 2025 monthly race calendar and its 2026 ProSpec sequence show a club with enough depth to make that lesson repeatable. In a season built around control, Round 6 reinforced the idea that in drone racing, speed only matters when it is managed well.
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