World-first AI car race grinds to halt, coming too soon for autonomous tech

Single-Seaters

Abu Dhabi's Autonomous Racing League attempted to hold the first open race between AI-controlled cars on Saturday. Cambridge Kisby was trackside at Yas Marina to see an ambitious event, held at least a year too early

A2RL Abu Dhabi race

Dallara Super Formula cars make up the A2RL grid, with each team developing their own AI

A2RL

Will AI replicate the mind of a racing driver? Can lines of code be infused with the competitive fire, the instinct for a promising gap, the sense of a car’s razor-edged limit, or the precise positioning to frustrate rivals?

Not anytime soon is the short answer, after last weekend’s debut Autonomous Racing League event which was billed as the first ever open race between driverless cars. The grand final saw one car spin on the first green flag lap and the remaining three AI machines grind to a halt behind them.

If this was what the series meant by its claim to be “redefining racing entertainment”, then the crowd gave its instant verdict: thousands of spectators in the stands stood up and left early, as humans emerged from the pitlane to recover the cars.

“We are exploring a huge uncharted space right now”

Earlier in the day, they had already watched a watered down version of the much-heralded “Man vs Machine” showdown, where a duel between former Red Bull F1 driver Daniil Kvyat and an AI racing car turned out to be a tame series of demonstration laps.

And before that came a series of practice sessions and qualifying, where one AI machine drove itself into a barrier and another drove straight into a second car. Just getting around the circuit was a challenge for some teams, let alone any attempt at racecraft.

It could have been an event to show once and for all whether wheel-to-wheel competition between AI cars would offer an entertaining alternative to human racers. But it had the distinct feel of a test session for technology that’s far from ready. And that really is what it was.

“We are exploring a huge uncharted space right now,” Dr Giovanni Pau, one of the team principals and technical director of Abu Dhabi’s Technical Innovation Institute (TII), told Motor Sport. “This technology is today at its infancy. It’s like a baby that was born yesterday, starting to put the first footsteps.”

The Abu Dhabi-backed Autonomous Racing League (A2RL) was announced just a year ago, and it stuck rigidly to its ambitious timetable of holding its first race on Saturday, despite setbacks that have delayed progress.

It began with ten teams made up of some of the brightest minds in artificial intelligence, each with an identical Super Formula-based car fitted with 50 sensors, including cameras, radar and lidar. These supply 15TB of data per lap — equivalent to 3m songs — which must be processed and assessed by the AI software ‘stack’. The stack was trained by machine learning — data from simulators and real-world laps by Daniil Kvyat was fed into the software so it could identify the patterns to circuit driving.

Each team then took that basic AI and developed it to improve their car’s performance with the goal of pitting it against the others on track at last weekend’s event — racing without a single human input within a $2m prize pool up for grabs.

But the goal went beyond hosting a racing series to accelerate development of AI, with benefits for the automotive industry and beyond. This was meant to become a new form of racing, to capture a young generation of supporters watching live streams via YouTube and Twitch and — understandably — to give sponsors a return for their money. In addition, the grandstands at Yas Marina were filled with 10,000 spectators, thanks to the free tickets offered on the series’ website.

Human vs AI Race A2RL

Thousands flocked to the Yas Marina circuit for a world-first in AI racing

A2RL

Scepticism was already rife in the run up to the race, and the Racing League — which has no further events scheduled this year — doesn’t appear to have dispelled many doubts by continuing with last weekend’s race.

The cars only began track-testing six weeks ago, and with different amounts of experience between the teams, made up of universities and technology companies, there was a wide range of performance. Friday’s test runs brought a taste of what was to come as PoliMove — a university team from Italy that had previously competed in other autonomous racing series — set lap times which hovered around 2 minutes. The slowest runners were at least double that.

“The amount of track time that we have is very limited,” Lawrence Walter, team principal of A2RL US-based racing team Code 19 told Motor Sport in Abu Dhabi. “If you added up all the track time that we actually had for testing [over the last two months] it’s a number that’s in the hours. So trying to develop from scratch an AI race car driver in just a short amount of time and test it with the limited test time that we have and get to the point where we’re competitive is incredibly difficult. Many of our competitors have been racing a long time autonomously. And so for the new teams coming in the challenge is even greater.”

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While it would be easy to write off the series as a complete failure, what fans didn’t see is the rate of development since teams began testing at the Abu Dhabi circuit.

“I’ve been stunned by the progress they’ve made,” said Tom McCarthy, executive director of operating company ASPIRE. “Last week some of the teams were doing 2min 20sec laps. At the start of this week, they were doing 2min 17sec. By Tuesday, they were at 2min 2sec. And that’s also with a lot of kissing of walls and it had to miss all the kerbs as running over them disturbs the on-board computer.”

The top teams estimate that they are improving their pace by 60% per month — a number which will diminish as the AI reaches the physical capability of the car it’s sat in — and some predict that they’ll be within 1sec of Daniil Kvyat‘s best lap of 1min 47sec, set last weekend in a conventional Super Formula car, by this time in 2025 when the next event is due to take place. However, as Saturday’s event showed, actually racing another car is a different prospect.

A decade ago, Audi demonstrated an RS7 car that could lap Laguna Seca in California by itself. Five years on, Roborace cars were running autonomously around circuits, although the series collapsed before it ever got to running open races. There’s also the Indy Autonomous Challenge where AI cars compete in overtaking tasks.

None have held conventional races, let alone invite the public to watch, and last week seemed to show why.

A2RL Abu Dhabi 2024

Technology is a constantly improving affair. Autonomous racing cars will be no different

A2RL

Qualifying

The Autonomous Racing League (A2RL) had originally intended to include a field of 10 cars, but soon cut itself down to eight in order to maintain a level of competitiveness.

That was further halved when only four cars were deemed fit enough to race in the final. Qualifying had been split into three different phases over two days: pre-qualifying (a speed trial which ranked teams 1-8), attack/defend (in which each team had to prove they can safely overtake another car — only one did) and a final time trial to determine a final grid order. Italy’s PoliMove team secured pole position, followed by Team TUM (from Germany’s Technical University of Munich) Team Unimore (Italy) and Team Constructor (Germany).

Not all teams escaped the process unscathed, with crashes that everybody felt safe laughing at, given there was no risk of human injury. During Friday practice, the Team Kinetiz car turned into Turn 12 around 10m before the actual corner and crashed straight into the armco on its 30mph out-lap. The following day, during some attack and defence drills, Team TUM did its best Lance Stroll impression by failing to brake entirely and running into the back of Team PoliMove.

After qualifying came the ‘Man vs Machine’ run with a car developed by Abu Dhabi’s Technical Innovation Institute (Team TII) and Kvyat, who has been involved with the programme for months. He helped to train the initial AI software that each team began with and was billed to race against an autonomous machine, but instead followed it for a few laps and then breezed past on the straight.

“I don’t think the exact point of this weekend is to put the car to the complete physical limit,” he said. “The purpose is to bring all these technologies to help humanity. If a car can be controlled [autonomously] at 240km/h (150mph) it can certainly be controlled on the highway at normal road speeds.”

 

The race

It was the centrepiece of a year’s worth of preparation, and organisers were cautious at this genuine world-first. The four cars in the final trundled down the Yas Marina’s pit straight for three laps behind a safety car before the race went green…. For just six corners before coming to a grinding halt. With cold tyres after the processional laps, the leading PoliMove car locked up and went into a spin, while the trailing Unimore car only narrowly avoided contact. With little racing experience within each team and only an outfit of mechanics shared among the entire paddock, it was almost inevitable that a lack of motor sport knowledge would come back to bite the wheel-to-wheel action. As of now, each car is capable of delivering telemetry back to the pitwall as well as information on tyre temperatures and pressures. The only problem is that teams have not had time to train the AI on what to do with this information — resulting in PoliMove’s first lap spin.

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The car also hadn’t learned how to light up its rear tyres and spin itself round, so was stranded. Almost simultaneously, the Team Constructor car lost its AI connection with the pitwall and was left stranded on the main straight. A yellow flag caused the final two cars to grind to a halt too, as they had been programmed not to pass during a caution period — even if another car was stationary.

It took a full 45 minutes before they were all returned to the pitlane for a restart — with three cars after Polimove lost its internet connection and refused to start.

The second attempt wasn’t much more successful: the leading Team Unimore came to a sudden stop at the Turn 5 hairpin and (without yellow flags) was passed by Team TUM which went on to win the race — the commentators still talking about other cars’ troubles as it crossed the line.

But by now, the fans in the stands numbered just a few hundred and the online viewing figures, which numbered 600,000 at one point, had dwindled.

A2RL Abu Dhabi Team TUM celebrate on the podium

Team TUM celebrate victory in Abu Dhabi

A2RL

TUM’s academics and students rightly celebrated their feat in developing a car that emerged victorious from the weekend. But this was not racing as we know it. While participants are confident that the technology will improve quickly, and provide a much improved spectacle next year, AI predictions have all too often been overly-optimistic, from autonomous car technology to the abilities of large language models such as ChatGPT.

Dr. Giovanni Pau told Motor Sport that the cars should soon be up to speed with a human driver over one lap, but that teaching them the racecraft for proper wheel-to-wheel racing would prove the real challenge.

“It is basically getting the data, analysing the data and then making the next step,” he said. “That could be: increase the throttle, brake 10% of pressure or steer half a degree in this direction. The car knows the line that must follow and then there is a component on the software that’s called the controller that tries to track that line as much as possible. Then from there, it then makes a decision on what to do. Now, what is the problem? The problem is that today there is a huge uncharted space. That is how to map the combination of data coming from the sensor to an actual situation. What needs to be done in the next several years is exploring that space.”

“Right now, I’m about 10 seconds slower than Daniil [per lap]. If I meet race him in a year from now, and I was Daniil, I would be scared. Because in a year from now, I think I will be within the second of him. He might be beating me still, but from then on it really becomes the toss of a coin.”

Pau has previously said that he hopes for a Formula 1 grid to be made up of both human drivers and autonomous machines, powered by the brilliant minds of those often found behind the pitwall.

The headlines around Adrian Newey’s potential departure from Red Bull show that fans can appreciate the engineering that goes into a racing car, but we could be waiting some time until AI cars can compete against each other effectively. The jury is still out on whether it will offer entertaining racing.

After last Saturday, how many will be tuning in next year?