We can easily field an entry for the Formula Pi races at Springfield Raceway in Cambridge. Which Cambridge, you ask? The original, in Emgland, about 50 miles north of London. Most of you will remember the Raspberry Pi, a series of single board computers. Some of them run Windows 10, but most run versions of Linux, a full multitasking, multithreaded *NIX compatible operating system. Raspberry Pi's come is several flavors, with their latest starting at $5.
Now Geek.com has announced a racing series for Raspberry Pi controlled self driving cars. Google did it, Tesla has done it, and the Formula Pi racing series takes driverless cars to a new level, and it isn't expensive.
http://www.geek.com/news/theres-going-to-be-a-raspberry-pi-driverless-racing-championship-1663363/ Right now, Formula Pi is on Kickstarter, and are about half way to their funding goal. PiBorg provides the robotic cars, and they have complete code, but we can modify it. Suffice it to say, the robotic cars are fixed but the parameters used for following colors, dealing with collisions, conservation of energy are all modifyable. To participate in the Winter Series, we would need to commit to $46 (ish depending on what the Pound Sterling does in the next month or so) and that allows us to race in a minimum of 5 races between October 2016 to January 2017. Another $46 will get you an entry into the summer series, April - July 2017. In both cases, the car is completely provided, we do get to fine tune the code and YetiBorg lid (also called a YetiBorg Top and a YetiLid) (a paintable, decalable fiberglass lid to customize our YetiBorg)
http://www.geek.com/news/theres-going-to-be-a-raspberry-pi-driverless-racing-championship-1663363/Obviously, the most serious teams will pop for their own YetiBorg so they can fine tune the parameters used in racing on their colored surfaces. But one YetiBorg could be shared among several teams. See the Kickstarted page also, for more info:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/frobotics/formula-pi-self-driving-robot-racing-with-the-raspThe track lanes and lengths vary considerably, but the shorter inside lanes require slowing more for turns. Fortunately things are well documented.
http://formulapi.com/track-1/lanesNotice, nothing has required any on-site participation. As a club, we could do our testing on this side of the Atlantic, and send code to them Via FTP and our lid by mail or delivery service. Who's in?