• Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    14 days ago

    There are pros and cons, for sure.

    On my bike, i use a handlebar mounted camera. When I had my previous e-scooter, I had a camera mounted to my motorcycle helmet.

    Despite the motorcycle helmet weighing a ton, my head and neck were straight, so this weight didn’t have a negative impact.

    But on bike rides, my neck is in a different position due to being bent forward, so even a small amount of weight is felt. And on a multi-hour ride, I don’t want to risk getting Shermer’s Neck.

    Ideally, we should be using 360 cameras, but someone needs to make one specifically as a bike dash camera (long battery life, durable, can endure the elements, etc). An insta360 doesn’t cut it.

    • _haha_oh_wow_@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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      14 days ago

      Drift is kinda neat because you can network the cameras to get front and back (or even panoramic) coverage, but I sure wouldn’t want to try putting more than 1 of them on a helmet lol

      I also mount mine to downhill MTB helmets and ebike helmets, which helps a ton with weight.

      • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        14 days ago

        Oh, man! I love my Drift Ghost X. It’s seen around 20,000km worth of bike and e-scooter rides by this point - hot summers, sub zero winters, rain, hail, you name it! I’ve been wanting to pull the trigger on a newer model, just to get image stabilization and mount one on the front and one on the rear.

        But I’m not liking the built-in battery, no matter how long it lasts. I picked up one of their extended batteries, which I can swap out any time to extend the life of this camera for many years beyond "500 charge cycles).

        Drift is one of the few companies who actually make affordable dash cams for non-cars.