- Nearly 16,000 drones formed the largest synchronized display ever recorded.
- The performance earned dual Guinness World Records for drone coordination achievements.
- China replaced fireworks’ chemical combustion with digitally programmed light choreography.
Liuyang, often called the “fireworks capital of the world,” has added another milestone to its history.
About two weeks ago, nearly 16,000 drones took to the sky in what is now the largest synchronized drone display ever recorded.
The show involved 15,947 units, each following a programmed flight path to create towers, blossoms, and a glowing “Sky Tree.”
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Dual GWRs for one show
The event earned two Guinness World Records, one for the number of drones controlled from a single computer and another for the 7,496 units that launched fireworks during the performance.
The show, organized by Gaoju Innovation with support from Liuyang’s pyrotechnic experts, was titled “A Firework Belonging to Me.”
The concept replaced gunpowder with software, transforming what was once a chemical art into a digital one.
Each drone’s movements were guided through RTK positioning and mesh networking, with updates sent in real time to maintain precision.
The technology used in this operation reflects the same kind of engineering that powers navigation systems and autonomous control.
In this case, it directs a performance on a massive scale.
However, such shows can fail, as seen in a previous Liuyang event where malfunctioning drones caught fire and fell toward the crowd.
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Incidents like that reveal how fragile large-scale drone operations can be.
Coordinating thousands of lithium-powered flying devices requires exact precision, and any software error could turn a record-setting performance into a safety hazard.
While the drones used are far more advanced than typical beginner drone models, the risks remain, especially when weather and communication interference come into play.
What stands out about this achievement is not only its beauty but also its potential applications beyond entertainment.
The same systems that make synchronized light formations possible could easily adapt for mapping, signal jamming, or other coordinated tasks.
The overlap between performance technology and military research is clear, and it raises questions about how far drone control systems could evolve.
While the show was presented as a celebration of creativity and national pride, it also demonstrated capabilities that could interest defense strategists as much as event organizers.
China’s latest record may encourage other countries to attempt similar displays, pushing drone technology further into mainstream use.
For now, it remains an impressive example of how precision programming can turn hardware into art.
Via AV Magazine
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