You're basically paying for a simple recording device which has a few year's lifespan (unless the Malaysian Sun kills it prematurely when you park outdoors, whichever comes first.)
But for me, I just want a simple video recorder and nothing fancy. Unless I go nuts and go for those 'Industrial' and programmable vehicle DVRs.
My criteria
-Clear image recording even at night
-Reverse cam
-Collision sensor to lock the recording
OOTB REVIEW
Basically, what you'd get would be the DVR itself, the cigarette lighter plug, the reverse cam and two rubber bands |
Well, yeah, the reverse cam. I just wonder how well it will see in the dark since the four LEDs are white and not infra-red as I was expecting it to be. |
FIRST TRIAL
Ahem. Yeah, finally figured out why the screen was so blurry... |
INSTALLING THE REVERSE CAM
The cable for the reverse cam looked worryingly short at first. For a small hatch, it would be OK but I would start to worry if this was for a large sedan. After a rough measuring exercise, I realised I would have a lot of 'excess' wires. In the end, I made the cable go through a longer route (pillars and roof) so that I would not end up with a bunch of unsightly coil on either ends.
Essentially, there are two connectors to the DVR. The Left is the Micro-USB for power and the right is a 3.5mm audio jack for the reverse cam. |
I unscrewed the metal part, reversed it to fit into my car's Third Brake Light housing but I know that later on, I would be fiddling more with it. |
Then crimp the red cable and push it into the T-Tap and you're done! Sorry for the slightly crimped cable as I did not have a proper Crimper. Heh |
TESTING
After a few days road, I can say that having a screen that double up as a rear-view mirror which turns off after 3 minutes is a very, very bad idea. It is very obvious in the evenings or at night where momentarily, you'd get confused with the moving images of 'rushing' roads or lights, thinking there are cars trying to pass you from behind.
Recognising a max capacity of 32GB makes this model quite limited. I haven't done any calculations but when 32GB yields 40 5-minute files, this means I have about 100 minutes of recording, which is slightly less than my daily trip to the office. Bear in mind, the device is recording both front and rear cameras.
I really hate microSD cards. If I am not accidentally destroying them, I am not getting any data. When the card was first inserted, I formatted it with the DVR. At first, I could view the files through the PC and now, it refused to even be recognised. Thinking it was burnt, I put it back to the DVR and it worked. Just that I could not view the files anymore.
FINE-TUNING [25.01.2019]
OK, after more than a month, I guess the DVR is working as it should be AFTER I got a new microSD card. The card was a 16GB version which allowed me to store about a set of 10 front and rear recordings at 5 minute intervals on a compromised resolution. Initially, the first card I had was a 32GB but out of all 40-50 or so recordings (eventually it;s storage capacity degraded), only a small number can be played while the rest were just enormous files of.. unrecognisable nothings. Either the microSD card was too slow to be written or, the system could not recognise the capacity.
I had to set the g-sensor to a minimum as it was so sensitive, all the 20 video files were locked and it could not perform any continuous loop recording.
THINGS YET TO BE DONE
1. Reposition the rear camera
- It's bright white lights keep shining on the rear glass's dried up water stains
- Final location might be slightly above the rear license plate ala Peugeot cars but I'm worried it might be blurred due to the water back-spray thrown up by the rear tires during the rain
- OK, maybe it's time to have another set of rally mud-flaps too....
2. IR LEDS
- Once the they are in, I might want to experiment with them as well, to create some IR lamps for reversing.
- Digital Cameras are very sensitive to them but they give you a black and white images