DashCam/ Traffic recorder/ Accident camcorder or else named device advice wanted


Recommended Posts

You need to double check reviews on those rear view mirror type are usually made for left hand drive cars and will not adjust enough to give straight view on a right hand drive vehicle if the lens is offset to one side.

http://www.techmoan.com/

Yes, thanks, aware!

 

techmoan.com guy is not going to answer and  I am not any wise what I am getting still, but anyone here would have opinion/review for

relee.cn  Relee RLAT-92 720p (says 1080p, not listed on their site)

 

 

*NTK96632

*HD Recording 720p/30FPS

*Wide view angle 120 degree

*Uninterupted Cycle Recording

*Suppurt up to 32GB MicroSD Card (TF)

*Rechargeble Li-Ion Battery (~1Hour), CarCharger, Charging time 2HRS

& True Full DH (1080p) DVR (with LCD screen on a wrong for UK side of traffic- not worried) model RLDV-920 here http://relee.cn/proshow.aspx?classId=8&id=127

 

 

*Amba +OV5653

*Full HD recording, 1080P 30fps

*H.264 compression

*Wide view angle, 120 degree

*Internal GPS logger for path, position, speed record

*Replay path, position information on Google map

*G-sensor for collision data protection

*uninterrupted cycle recording

*Support up to 32GB Micro SD Card

It looks to take up a lot of real estate on the screen looks to be about 7" in height with the GPS receiver on top so Id ensure you have a position to put it that wont restrict your view.

It looks to take up a lot of real estate on the screen looks to be about 7" in height with the GPS receiver on top so Id ensure you have a position to put it that wont restrict your view.

? good point again!  looks yes, though I think it would be smaller than  S1W ? there is quite a bit of a space on my windshield (not that a small of a car)

Also (late, sorry), I am leaning more in to smaller cams ( as either to combine for each purpose) (as Mobius (+ external modular Battery) or 808's) or as in two either (RELEE) "Underdogs" above...

very occasionally I'd like to take  that "DashCam" out of a car and stick it my Lid or fairing of a (moto)bike for "summer blast's" (tour's)

@ Anyone reading and taking notes: @ least half of my links where to the fake cameras! (I am shocked as well)

 

My deliberations?

C1W still on

 

MOBIUS is turning most favorable to be AIO device , so are RELEE (both  RLAT-92  & RLDV-920 models), pending verification to the hardware (seller) being genuine components/camera's/ seller and performance

 

Genuine 0801 MiniCameras are being considered still, BUT genuine, from Genuine sellers

 

 

INNOVV C1 or C2 is off the table because of USB connector/lead issues

as long awaited and appreciated review by techmoan.com guy is out!

 

 

Garmin have a device that is coming out. Knowing them, it should be a solid device, and probably the one of the best on the market. 

 

Garmin website link

Engadget brief hands-on

 

garmin-dash-cam-1.jpg

 

Edit: Wow. Large Picture. Much detail. Lots amaze. Wow. 

Garmin have a device that is coming out. Knowing them, it should be a solid device, and probably the one of the best on the market. 

 

Garmin website link

Engadget brief hands-on

 

 

 

Edit: Wow. Large Picture. Much detail. Lots amaze. Wow. 

 

 

 

Very impressive! Price is impressive too! as  quoted ~$200 = ?1000!!!! that is the cost of stolen DVR and door glass (- labour, if you forget to take it out of a car once)   :p

i'm interested in getting one of these too... but i believe (could be wrong) that to hold any weight in court they have to also measure your speed, acceleration, and probably some other nonsense too that the cheaper ones do not..

 

i was looking at a blackvue too, but at nearly ?200 there are other things i'd rather spend that on usually :D

 

maybe later this year :)

(Y)

I wasted near a week in researching... could have bought quite few for that money :p

Just saying from hours of footage, reviews etc:

no need to spend more than ?32- get yourself G1w as dash cam, else there is Mini 0801 as a smallest dash cam, else (I think it will be my choice, as it'll work as AIO) MOBIUS, else there is SJ1000, truly AIO, whilst very many other are good choices too, BUT ONLY if GENUINE!

 

As for courts etc- whole different ball game, however everything would depend on case/scenario/implication, hence footage would better used to submit to investigative Fuzz, before it reaches courts of any kind ;)

Good thread though, :)

someone kept sticking things on my car in my mums private carpark, they stuck nails under the tyres, and damaged the paint, I was looking for a cam to catch them in the act, but lucky for them they moved out before I decided whether or not to buy one, Like you OP, I found I was baffled by all the choices, and gave up looking :)

so my gs1000 arrived.

its pretty small, i thought it was going to be massive, its about the size of a big snickers/mars bar.

its very plasticky.

Just place it near the rear mirror and you'd barely notice it, the wire isn't that long.

Haven't done a proper run around town, but once i do i'll let you know.

Techmoan is a good resource for reviews on Dashcams 

 

I personally use CaroO Pro Android app with my Samsung Galaxy Mega. It cost me just ?2.90. It films in 2, 3, or 5 minute chunks, in 720p or 1080p or 10 min chunks in 480p. But 480p isn't good enough imho.

 

It also has speed/GPS features. It has an auto G Sensor whereby, if you have an "incident" it will auto save in a "separate folder" the previous 10 seconds and the next 10 seconds of video.

 

I also have my online cloud Mega Android app "auto-sync" the CaroO "event" folder. This means the files are auto uploaded safe online and or on your PC. The 20 seconds files are around 20mb.

 

See a sample HERE of it in use in my car. (Take in to account Youtube re-encodes when you upload so the vid may look slightly grainier than the original file))

 

Pic below is in-app viewer

post-405-0-38547400-1390739166.png

so my gs1000 arrived.

its pretty small, i thought it was going to be massive, its about the size of a big snickers/mars bar.

its very plasticky.

Just place it near the rear mirror and you'd barely notice it, the wire isn't that long.

Haven't done a proper run around town, but once i do i'll let you know.

Herm... footage?

or it never happened! :P

 

also for all really getting in to it, apart from quick overviews by techmoan.com guy, there is more detailed site DashCamTalk.com with forums.

 

This topic is obviously short version of shortest version as for need to know about them devices ;)

 

Also, "new product" on the marked, still not reviewed/tested/torn apart fully by experts is DIMIKA AIO small factor DVR (direct competitor to MOBIUS and INNOVV @ $70 US= ?46) , would be good if anyone has better idea about them to share with us?

so i tried out the cam on a 3 hour drive, today's weather was probably the worst for sometime too.

 

the camera itself, gs1000, isn't great, after watching the video i was disappointed as i could barely make out the number plates, there seemed to be a slight purple hue too.

and for some reason it missed 3 seconds where a driver cut me off, had it hit my car i wouldn't have the evidence to prove it!

 

also as hard as i tried to get an original i still can't be 100% sure, which causes a problem when it comes to updating the firmware!

so can't recommend the gs1000.

Anyone tried this one? Looks good, especially having front and rear, but it's a tad expensive for the 32gb/GPS version ?270

http://www.ipixi.com/car-cameras/

 

Review

post-405-0-60361700-1391691961.png

Go Pros don't natively allow an external power supply as they run from battery,they write to a single file as opposed to chapter files style storage,no gps and are more expensive

Go Pros don't natively allow an external power supply as they run from battery,they write to a single file as opposed to chapter files style storage,no gps and are more expensive

 

^ FUD mostly.

 

GoPro has a miniUSB plug, so virtually any charger for a smartphone with the appropriate connector can be "natively" used with it.

 

It doesn't write to a single file and "expensive" is a relative term. This is how much the quality costs these days and anything below this price point can be called a cheap knock-off, especially if it's some noname brand which has flooded this niche market.

 

Cheapest is the dearest.

youtube Mobius GoPro side by side test,  

?43 Vs ? 300...

 

There you have it (I've googled it since your link is broken).

 

Mobius is extremely oversaturated  :x

 

Besides, youtube downsamples videos. It's a worthless platform for video quality comparison.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Yup, that's a doozy right there 😄
    • It's a bundle of tools created by a variety of people, so things can go wrong sometimes. It's a great addition to Windows, and I use a lot of the tools on a daily basis. Also, it's still a 0.**** release so quick updates are to be expected 😉
    • Oh, I did. And it's even worse than I was hoping! Besides a lot of techno-babble jargon (yes I understand 100% of it but it's still all just techno-babble) there's 2 key points that make me super-weary about even considering testing this out. -- By default, after installation, a relay is automatically set up, so you do not need to care about that. * Non-chatmail apps use email servers as a long-term message archive while chatmail clients use email servers for ephemeral instant message relay. * Supporting the full variety of classic email setups would require considerable development and maintenance efforts, and complicate making chatmail-based messaging more resilient, reliable and fast. -- Basically, the end-user device is the 'server' (relay) so there is NO ARCHIVING whatsoever because every message is necessarily ephemeral. Great for techno-paranoia (and for illicit activities preferring no tracks to cover) but terrible for everybody else. It's also ironically contradictory to engineering principles of redundancies besides the transport layers due to the explicit absence of any persistent storage. Instead of 'classic email address' retaining multi-GB messaging archives on its server, now every device must retain 100% of those storage demands. (Email messages were originally meant to be short correspondences, not the multi-MB attachments boondoggle that now exists with unlimited spam engines flooding every potential recipient.) Any device swap or reset (or loss) makes the entire message history go bye-bye forever... lest there's an off-device auto-archival "relay" mechanism that's really a separate server that holds onto all transported messages (an email server) that utilizes 'chatmail email address' identities (like an email server) and its own persistent storage archive (like an email server). But... this solution is hoping to exist alongside real-world email address identities (based on the email server relay pathway) but simply render messages in chat thread format in an ephemeral manner (with contents being encrypted, and messages auto-expiring) ... In the end, it's a chat app/experience for the Web3/P2P-at-all-costs zealots. (I have accts on all sorts of federated web3 services so I understand the technical and non-technical alike.) For any practical users, however, it's just another service to download/install, register, cross-share id cards/qr codes, but know that there's no history/archive whatsoever (by design) so no account/message recovery whatsoever... update the device, install a bummed update patch, or dare upgrade your device... all history, poof, gone. Ya gotta start everything over again like they're a brand new person.
    • You've tried DuckDuckGo and Brave Search, now get serious with SearXNG by Paul Hill Over the last decade, it has become quite trendy to dump Google Search in favor of privacy-preserving alternatives such as DuckDuckGo, Startpage, and Brave Search. These search engines have done a very good job at highlighting dodgy practices by Google, such as adjusting search results based on what it thinks you’ll like (filter bubble) and stalking you around the web to advertise to you. While these search engines are good starting points when compared to non-private services like Google, there are still quite a few issues with them. For example, both DuckDuckGo and Brave Search require running non-free JavaScript in your web browser, which is comparable to running proprietary software on your computer, meaning you can be sure about what it’s actually doing in the background. Another issue is that these search engines are hosted on the respective companies’ servers, and you are using a service that you don’t control. Finally, DuckDuckGo, while offering privacy features, relies heavily on Microsoft’s infrastructure for its results and, in the past, has permitted Microsoft tracking scripts. If you are looking for a more private search solution than DuckDuckGo, Brave Search, and Startpage, then I recommend taking a look at SearXNG. It is a privacy-respecting metasearch engine that can be used via different public instances, which is useful for mobile users, or you can install it on your computer or server and run it locally with maximum control. Unlike Google, Bing, or Brave Search, which crawl the web and have their own search indexes, SearXNG is a metasearch engine, meaning it taps other search engines, stripping your identifying data, such as IP address, user agent, and cookies, in the process. Your search query is sent to the other search engines you enable before aggregating the results. SearXNG has deployment flexibility. If you are a casual user or a mobile user and don’t want to run SearXNG locally, you can use a public instance that is hosted by someone else. The main problem with this is that you are putting trust in the maintainer of the instance regarding stuff like logs that they may keep; good hosts should have a privacy policy explaining their policies. If you are trying to use SearXNG, you can also install the software on your device and then head to 127.0.0.1:8080 in your browser and search from there. While you don’t have to worry about a third-party admin like the public instances, search engines could ultimately block your IP address if they frown on you pulling in their search results locally. If you want to run it locally, it’s a good idea to use proxies or VPNs to hide your actual IP. You don’t have to worry about this with a public instance, as search engines never see your IP address. The main privacy benefit of using SearXNG is that it isolates your identity from the underlying engines that it’s capable of searching, such as Google and Bing. These search engines will only see requests coming from a generic server, so they can’t profile you and create a bubble filter that influences what results you see. This also ensures that your search engine doesn’t turn into an echo chamber that prevents you from reading alternative points of view. As a free software project, you are allowed to inspect SearXNG to make sure there are no negative features bundled inside. This sets it apart from the privacy search engines mentioned earlier because you can’t check their source code. As a meta search engine, you are not restricted to getting results from one source. Due to the fact that it scrapes content from other websites, your SearXNG instance will periodically get blocked from different providers, so it’s good to select a range of sources as a backup. While enabling all of the services will give you great results, this can make searching slower. I am personally happy with slower searches for the best results, but you can always check which providers are slowing down your search from the search results page and disable them to speed things up. If you want decent results quickly, enable the main search providers such as Google, Brave, DuckDuckGo, Qwant, Bing, and Yahoo. This way, you get wide coverage without the latency. On the Engines tab in Preferences, do note that there are different tabs, such as General, Images, and Videos, with their own providers that can be toggled and are not covered by "Enable all" while on the General tab, so be sure to dig into each. Just a note, if you want to enable everything, press "Enable all" in one tab, then hit save at the bottom of the page, then do the next tab, and so on. If you press "Enable all", then do that in each tab, and then save, nothing will stick. When I had just some of the search engines enabled, I searched “define nefarious” and results came back with the definition of “define” - obviously that was a sucky result. However, when I had everything enabled, it found dictionary pages for the word “nefarious” and even had an inline definition on the sidebar, which is quite nice too - that was delivered by WolframAlpha for anyone wondering! Probably the worst thing about this meta search engine is that the engines you select are saved with a cookie, so you must enable them on every new device you use SearXNG on, including if you decide to go into incognito mode with your web browser. Honestly, I would say this is the most annoying aspect, and perhaps if your browser lets you choose a separate private browsing search engine, then it would be best to use DuckDuckGo for this portion of your browsing. Another weakness of SearXNG is the random blocking of it by search providers. When you are on the results page, expand the “Response time” box, and it will show things like “Suspended: too many requests” or “access denied”. This is why it is good to enable several providers so that there is always a fallback to get results from. I won’t pretend SearXNG will be for everyone, however, if you enable all of the providers and put up with the slower response time, the results can be really amazing. Even if you don’t want to use it as your daily driver, keeping a bookmark handy that links to it is a good idea if you ever feel like doing a deep dive into a niche topic where other search engines are just failing to bring up any good result, due to the amount of sources it looks on. If you’re interested in radical user control over the software you use, installing SearXNG locally can also be a good idea, but be prepared to be temporarily blocked from sites if you trigger bot sensors without a VPN. Personally, I’ve opted to use a public instance, rather than install it myself. If you want to use it via a public instance, head over to searx.space to find a provider. Let us know in the comments if you have used SearXNG or its predecessor, Searx. What do you think about the quality of the results?
    • Dear Neowin, If it is not too much trouble, can you start using the new-ish designations for Insider Preview? "Experimental" is different than "former Dev" as it can apply to different models, eg 26H1 or 26H2 etc, right? No need to seed confusion IMHO. And, please "finally" update your graphics. OK?
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      503
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      226
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      158
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!