Dashcam?
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Funny thing is I had a scratch on my bumper which was my fault and two days before the accident I got a chip in my windshield.
All that was fixed. $5600!
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@George-K " . . . about 18 months ago"
Has it happened like that again since? Why complicate your life?
About wanting stuff, Gandhi said, Our needs make us vulnerable enough; why increase your vulnerability?
But if you insist on going through with this plan despite my excellent advice, YOYO; I have no other recommendations.
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How do they work? Just record to an SD card?
I can see the utility.
Yes, that is correct. As @Geoarge says, they just rewrite over the old stuff. But, sometimes you have to reformat the card just to clean it up.
One thing to be aware - in some cars, the "electric" port will remain "live" after you turn off the car, so the dash cam will stay on forever. In other cars, the electric port is dead when you turn off the car.
But maybe if you are going to have it professionally installed, they will go directly to the engine battery?
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I have no advice other than they seem to be increasingly common, especially overseas. If I drove a lot I would probably get one and (hopefully) never have to pull the video. I'd imagine features you'd want would be:
- Small profile (not distracting to driver or passengers
- Long battery (?) life
- Include accurate date/time stamps
- HD video, if something happens or you need a license plate, you probably need to see the finer details in the video
- Automatic audio recording?
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I plan to have it professionally installed.
I wonder how much of a battery drain is is if wired to the battery. My first Audi's phone charging port was always hot, and I drained the battery by leaving the phone in the car for a few days.
Current car's USB ports go dead when the ignition's off.
Don't think I need it live all the time - just when driving.
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Pulled the trigger last week.
Got the "Rexing V1P Max 4K UHD Dual Channel".
At
Amazon's ShowroomBest Buy, I was able to get an open-box, like new unit for about $170. I got the "intelligent hardwire" kit as well. That is what they call a "super capacitor." It charges up while the vehicle is running as well as providing power to the dashcam(s). When the car is parked, there's no battery drain, but it has a motion sensor which turns on the camera(s) and records until the motion stops.The installation went well at BestBuy, and, overall, I'm pleased. I invested in a larger SD card so as to be able to store more video (you can go up to 128GB). I like the fact that you can program it to record whenever there's motion around your vehicle, even if unattended.
It has GPS and records speed and location.
Quality of the video is remarkably good.
Front camera view:
Rear camera view (notice the house on the left...)
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If I drove more I’d probably get one. Why not!
Cost about $300, installed, at BestBuy.
I think of it as insurance.
The one I got, by the way records constantly until the storage is filled - then it loops. The size of the SD card is up to you.
It has another nice feature - there's a motion sensor so if it sees anyone near my car, it starts recording even if the car is parked. When the car is in motion it charges a "supercapacitator" which allows it to turn on when there's motion nearby.