How to make my GoPro Hero 7 to work longer?
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
How to make my GoPro Hero 7 to work longer?
A question to owners of GoPro Hero 7, or 5th, or 6th (I hope for the answer from those who actually have tried the solution they are suggesting and have experience with those cameras).
My camera lasts for about an hour, even with an average video quality settings and wireless interfaces switched off. Yes, you can swap its battery with a spare, but first you have to open the protection frame and take the camera out of it (switching it off an interrupting recording in the process) - to do this every hour is really frustrating.
Are there better solutions to how to ensure its continuous operation for 3+ hours? As apparently some bloggers somehow manage to use it to record hours of content. I've seen some kind of (non-original) external battery modules claiming they will give you 2 extra hours of recording - but those are attached directly to camera itself, making the whole thing 2 times heavier and bigger. That's hardly an optimal solution, imo.
Is it possible to somehow connect a powerbank (which I could stash into my backpack, for example) over a flexible USB cable to the camera, and make it record videos while taking power from that bank AND switch to its internal battery when it's depleted (or vice versa)? Can I damage the camera while doing something like this?
My camera lasts for about an hour, even with an average video quality settings and wireless interfaces switched off. Yes, you can swap its battery with a spare, but first you have to open the protection frame and take the camera out of it (switching it off an interrupting recording in the process) - to do this every hour is really frustrating.
Are there better solutions to how to ensure its continuous operation for 3+ hours? As apparently some bloggers somehow manage to use it to record hours of content. I've seen some kind of (non-original) external battery modules claiming they will give you 2 extra hours of recording - but those are attached directly to camera itself, making the whole thing 2 times heavier and bigger. That's hardly an optimal solution, imo.
Is it possible to somehow connect a powerbank (which I could stash into my backpack, for example) over a flexible USB cable to the camera, and make it record videos while taking power from that bank AND switch to its internal battery when it's depleted (or vice versa)? Can I damage the camera while doing something like this?
#2
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Hi, @fuzzy_chainring . Thank you for the answer. Could you perhaps explain how exactly does the powerbank will work in conjunction with camera's own battery? Will it first deplete the latter, then automatically will switch to the former? Do I need a special powerbank and/or USB cable for that transition to work properly? Do I need to configure the camera somehow as well?
May be you could suggest some specific powerbank which have been working best for you? Also, powerbank of what capacity would you suggest as an optimal solution?
Sorry for that many questions, it's just a new field for me.
May be you could suggest some specific powerbank which have been working best for you? Also, powerbank of what capacity would you suggest as an optimal solution?
Sorry for that many questions, it's just a new field for me.
#3
Senior Member
I don't know if the 7 will work like my 3 but on long rides (or for a days fishing) I attach a dual 18650 "battery bank" to the USB connector and I can run over 9 hours. It first depletes the battery bank, then the internal battery.
On the down side, you have to have a hole cut in the side for the cable or buy skeletonized cover destroying the water tight case.
OTOH, there are Gopro extended battery cases but my solution was free.
On the down side, you have to have a hole cut in the side for the cable or buy skeletonized cover destroying the water tight case.
OTOH, there are Gopro extended battery cases but my solution was free.
#5
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: USA
Posts: 2,190
Bikes: Ti, Mn Cr Ni Mo Nb, Al, C
Mentioned: 22 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 942 Post(s)
Liked 526 Times
in
349 Posts
I've stopped using my Hero 5 because it became a PITA with the battery life. One way to extend it is to manually start and stop recordings. So what you are doing is capturing the start and stop of segments. I did this for a while, I wasn't going to carry an extra battery so it's sitting right now.
#6
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: USA
Posts: 2,190
Bikes: Ti, Mn Cr Ni Mo Nb, Al, C
Mentioned: 22 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 942 Post(s)
Liked 526 Times
in
349 Posts
I understand and that you can use an external battery, but that is too much of a PITA for me. I wear a chest harness because I prefer that POV and even if I mounted it under my stem, I have enough on there (light and computer) that I don’t want anymore junk cluttering up my cockpit with an extra battery.
#7
aka Tom Reingold
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA
Posts: 40,498
Bikes: 1962 Rudge Sports, 1971 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Raleigh Pro Track, 1974 Raleigh International, 1975 Viscount Fixie, 1982 McLean, 1996 Lemond (Ti), 2002 Burley Zydeco tandem
Mentioned: 511 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 7346 Post(s)
Liked 2,453 Times
in
1,430 Posts
If your camera is mounted on your body, then the battery should be mounted somewhere on your body, too.
__________________
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#8
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: USA
Posts: 2,190
Bikes: Ti, Mn Cr Ni Mo Nb, Al, C
Mentioned: 22 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 942 Post(s)
Liked 526 Times
in
349 Posts
Don't want to carry an extra battery on my body. Also with the Hero, in order to run an extra battery the access door has to be open. Not good if you are caught in the rain, and no I don't want to jerry rig it. You are already jerry rigging it with the extra battery. Overall it's just poor battery performance for the way I intended to use it. I've seen cases you can buy that I think mitigates the door being open when running an extra battery, but if one is going to go to that extent....a Hero is probably not the right tool for the intended purpose. Just get a regular GoPro.
#9
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: USA
Posts: 2,190
Bikes: Ti, Mn Cr Ni Mo Nb, Al, C
Mentioned: 22 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 942 Post(s)
Liked 526 Times
in
349 Posts
FWIW, the water resistance of the HDMI and USB ports on GoPros (at least the H4B, H5B and H7B) is much better than most people realize.
I've run open ports in drizzle and rain with without issue while connected to gimbals and an external battery. The H4B was also once fully submerged for about a minute without any lasting effect.
It sounds like you've already given up so this info is probably moot at this point.
I've run open ports in drizzle and rain with without issue while connected to gimbals and an external battery. The H4B was also once fully submerged for about a minute without any lasting effect.
It sounds like you've already given up so this info is probably moot at this point.
#10
Senior Member
- My camera lasts for about an hour, even with an average video quality settings and wireless interfaces switched off.
- Are there better solutions to ensure its continuous operation for 3+ hours?
- Is it possible to somehow connect a powerbank over a flexible USB cable to the camera, and make it record videos while taking power from that bank AND switch to its internal battery when it's depleted (or vice versa)?
- Can I damage the camera while doing something like this?
- That's correct, up to 90 minutes.
https://gopro.com/help/articles/bloc...ry-information - yes
- yes
- only mechanical
- Could you perhaps explain how exactly does the powerbank will work in conjunction with camera's own battery?
- Will it first deplete the latter, then automatically will switch to the former?
- Do I need a special powerbank and/or USB cable for that transition to work properly?
- Do I need to configure the camera somehow as well?
- May be you could suggest some specific powerbank which have been working best for you?
- Also, powerbank of what capacity would you suggest as an optimal solution?
- Powerbank first, battery second.
- charge and power through USB first
- no special, just an USB-C plug end for the Hero7
- no
- perfect are the ones with USB-C output and USB QC
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_fro..._udlo=25&rt=nc
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_fro...fLoc=2&_fsrp=1 - 2-6 times the capacity of the battery (5,368Wh), means 10-30Wh / 3-8Ah.
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_fro...rt=nc&_udhi=12
Likes For angerdan:
#11
Senior Member
My weekend rides last a lot more than an hour. I had been using it to make movies set to music of our group rides. I had resorted to manually starting and stopping recording certain segments to prolong battery life, but I found that I really missed a lot. Numerous times unexpected things happened that I wished was captured, but it was too late...
I just got a H7 Black and one feature I haven't used yet is "Quick Start." I don't believe the previous versions have this. When QS is enabled, the camera is off and then you simply hit the shutter button (top) and it almost instantly starts recording. This vs. normal mode where you have to turn it on, wait, then hit the shutter button. Stop recording and the camera turns off again, saving the battery.
#12
Senior Member
#13
Me duelen las nalgas
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Texas
Posts: 13,513
Bikes: Centurion Ironman, Trek 5900, Univega Via Carisma, Globe Carmel
Mentioned: 199 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4559 Post(s)
Liked 2,802 Times
in
1,800 Posts
With my Ion Speed Pro I just use an external USB battery (Jackery, but the brand doesn't matter) and USB cable. Runs for many hours or until the 32GB card fills up. Usually good enough for the 6-8 hour group event rides I do occasionally. I run it mostly in case there's an accident. That has come in handy a few times.
The Ion Speed Pro and similar cameras from Ion, Contour and Polaroid (an Ion camera rebranded) are cylindrical with USB ports on the rear. Easy to hook up a USB cable to a battery pack.
Unfortunately my GoPro knockoff (VanTop Moment 4, one of many similar cameras) has been a disappointment. The USB port cannot be use to charge and run the camera while it's mounted on the tripod mount. The only alternative is to put the camera inside the clear plastic housing (which muffles the audio to near-uselessness), drill or cut a hole in the bottom of the housing to pass a USB cable, and find a decent quality mounting system. The mounts included with the VanTop are crap -- two of them broke within a week, one on the first use, the other on the second use. The only thing that distinguishes the VanTop Moment 4 from its nearly identical cousins is the inclusion of a good quality 32GB media card.
The Cycliq cameras are intended to resolve some of these common complaints from cyclists who choose cameras for traffic documentation rather than action cams to record stunts. But comments from some buyers indicate Cycliq has problems with both quality control and customer service.
For now it appears the only cost effective solution is to buy an affordable camera with reasonably good image quality, modify the protective housing to accommodate a USB cable and to allow sound to be recorded, and use an external USB battery pack. Add some weather resistant tape and/or hardening sealant if desired. But for now there's no ready-made package that includes a reliable camera and practical housing with battery for recording video for several hours.
One of my maybe-projects will be modifying a housing for these generic cameras that cost about $50-$70 each, and just replacing the cameras as they wear out, break or simply fail. But since most of them follow the same form factor it may be possible to reuse the same housing, mount, cable and battery pack.
The Ion Speed Pro and similar cameras from Ion, Contour and Polaroid (an Ion camera rebranded) are cylindrical with USB ports on the rear. Easy to hook up a USB cable to a battery pack.
Unfortunately my GoPro knockoff (VanTop Moment 4, one of many similar cameras) has been a disappointment. The USB port cannot be use to charge and run the camera while it's mounted on the tripod mount. The only alternative is to put the camera inside the clear plastic housing (which muffles the audio to near-uselessness), drill or cut a hole in the bottom of the housing to pass a USB cable, and find a decent quality mounting system. The mounts included with the VanTop are crap -- two of them broke within a week, one on the first use, the other on the second use. The only thing that distinguishes the VanTop Moment 4 from its nearly identical cousins is the inclusion of a good quality 32GB media card.
The Cycliq cameras are intended to resolve some of these common complaints from cyclists who choose cameras for traffic documentation rather than action cams to record stunts. But comments from some buyers indicate Cycliq has problems with both quality control and customer service.
For now it appears the only cost effective solution is to buy an affordable camera with reasonably good image quality, modify the protective housing to accommodate a USB cable and to allow sound to be recorded, and use an external USB battery pack. Add some weather resistant tape and/or hardening sealant if desired. But for now there's no ready-made package that includes a reliable camera and practical housing with battery for recording video for several hours.
One of my maybe-projects will be modifying a housing for these generic cameras that cost about $50-$70 each, and just replacing the cameras as they wear out, break or simply fail. But since most of them follow the same form factor it may be possible to reuse the same housing, mount, cable and battery pack.
#14
Me duelen las nalgas
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Texas
Posts: 13,513
Bikes: Centurion Ironman, Trek 5900, Univega Via Carisma, Globe Carmel
Mentioned: 199 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4559 Post(s)
Liked 2,802 Times
in
1,800 Posts
Good to know. That might persuade me to buy a GoPro. I'm not sure whether those battery packs are compatible with my cheap VanTop Moments 4 camera -- the USB/HDMI ports compartment is next to the tripod mount.