Cycling Video Cameras
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 755
Bikes: 2019 CAAD12, 2015 Specialized Sirrus Comp
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 562 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 64 Times
in
46 Posts
Cycling Video Cameras
I am looking for recommendations on rear-facing cycling cameras. I have been looking at the Cycliq 6 and the Garmin Varia RCT715, but the issues seem to be battery life (I often ride 4-6 hours). Are there others on the market? Do people have a fav they can recommend?
The main purpose is in case there's an incident.
Thank you,
Robert
The main purpose is in case there's an incident.
Thank you,
Robert
Last edited by Robert A; 11-20-22 at 12:22 AM.
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Australia
Posts: 823
Bikes: 2002 Trek 5200 (US POSTAL), 2020 Canyon Aeroad SL
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 313 Post(s)
Liked 680 Times
in
327 Posts
What is your intended use? Is it for safety and to capture incidents? Or is it for action footage for YouTube videos and whatnot?
I own both the Cycliq Fly6 and the Garmin Varia RCT715.
The video quality is far better on the Fly6. It's certainly not GoPro Hero 10 quality, but it's more than good enough for it's intended purpose. It'll capture number plates and record incidents without any worry.
The Varia footage is "adequate" for capturing number plates and some paceline footage for Strava if you're into that. It's not perfect, but it does the job. If your roads are SUPER rough it may not be good enough though. No image stabilisation. It also saves videos in 30-second sections, which can be a little annoying! That said, I rarely ride without it now. The radar function is fantastic.
You can use the Varia while plugged into an external battery pack to charge / extend run time. Not sure if the Cycliq can do that, you may need to consult Google.
I own both the Cycliq Fly6 and the Garmin Varia RCT715.
The video quality is far better on the Fly6. It's certainly not GoPro Hero 10 quality, but it's more than good enough for it's intended purpose. It'll capture number plates and record incidents without any worry.
The Varia footage is "adequate" for capturing number plates and some paceline footage for Strava if you're into that. It's not perfect, but it does the job. If your roads are SUPER rough it may not be good enough though. No image stabilisation. It also saves videos in 30-second sections, which can be a little annoying! That said, I rarely ride without it now. The radar function is fantastic.
You can use the Varia while plugged into an external battery pack to charge / extend run time. Not sure if the Cycliq can do that, you may need to consult Google.
#3
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 755
Bikes: 2019 CAAD12, 2015 Specialized Sirrus Comp
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 562 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 64 Times
in
46 Posts
How long is the battery life on the Cycliq, and do you wish you also had front-facing? Does GoPro make anything better for cycling?
#4
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
Drift Ghost X may be the best value in a no-frills ride documentary video camera. I've been using a pair for more than two years (might be three years in December, I'd need to check my purchase records). No complaints.
Note: I've run video on almost every ride from 2015-2018. The one time I didn't, because I'd forgotten to recharge the camera (an older Ion with 90 minute runtime -- I could have strapped on a USB battery pack and cable and recharged while recording, but didn't do so that day), was the day I was hit by a car that failed to yield on a flashing yellow left turn and smacked me down. I had the green traffic light and pedestrian walk signal, so the flashing yellow on left was a safety hazard, but common in my city. No video evidence. Cop was at the intersection but shrugged it off and wrote it up implying that I failed to dodge the errant driver. Took three years to settle, didn't even cover my medical expenses. I will never ride without video again. Even on fast group or solo rides, it doesn't weigh that much. And the Drift cameras are sorta wedge shaped and fairly aerodynamic. I usually mount them front and rear on the bike, or on the top of my helmet.
The Ghost X original came with a 5-hour battery pack, and it delivered an honest 5-hour runtime the first year on at least 200 rides, many of those several hours long. It gradually dropped to about 4 hours for the second year, and rapidly declined in about a month or so recently. I replaced it with the 8-hour battery module, which I think is now standard on the Ghost X.
Basic HD video to 1080/60p, good image quality, color, contrast, dynamic range, etc., better than most at night. But don't expect reliable recording of US license plates at night. US plates are too small, seemingly by design to thwart surveillance. Many traffic documentary video cameras are reviewed in England or elsewhere in Europe where license plates are larger and easier to record, giving an impression that they'll perform similarly in the US. Meh, don't count on it. Daytime, sure. Nighttime, depends on the angle of the light, whether the plates are black characters on white, etc.
No image stabilization. No preview/review screen, just a simple lighted LCD control screen. It's easier to set the camera from the phone app. Plenty of modes and options, including continuous recording, or always-on but not recording until the user presses a button to save the previous 30 seconds or so and subsequent 30-60 seconds. I don't use that option. I know from having been hit by cars it's unlikely I'll remember to hit the save button, or my arm might be disabled, or I might be unconscious. So I use the "Car DVD" mode, which records and saves continuously, in 5 minute segments, until the media card is filled or the battery runs out. The 5-hour battery needs a 64 GB card, otherwise it'll begin to overwrite from the earliest files with 32GB or smaller cards. The 8-hour battery probably needs a 128GB card, which I don't have yet.
They're designed in England (not sure about assembled from parts made in Asia), primarily for motorcycle/scooter commuters. The cameras come with two basic mounting shoes that use heavy duty and dependable 3M adhesive: one is slightly concave, the other flat, to accommodate most motorcycle helmets on the side or top, or luggage carriers, rear racks, etc.
However to get the desired angle when top-mounting on my Bell Formula MIPS and POC Omne Air SPIN helmets, I used Blue Tack and 3M adhesive putty, which is detachable but sticks extremely reliably. Never had a failure in years of using the stuff for purposes beyond the manufacturers' designs. It's more like heavy duty Post-It Note adhesive than gummy adhesives, with a consistency and tack similar to Silly Putty, but far more secure. Peeling it off just takes a little patience to carefully lift it from an edge and gradually work it away from the surface. So far it's never damaged any surface to which I've applied it: bicycle helmets, photographic prints on RC paper (family snapshots), painted walls, exterior brick (to temporarily hold wire antennas for my shortwave radios, to hide them from the landlord), etc.
Very rugged, durable and dependable. It comes reasonably weather-resistant. I've ridden in rain several times, no leaks or internal fogging. A weatherproof housing is available but I've never needed it. I've dropped one a few times, no problems. I neglected to securely snap the camera into the stem mount once and it bounced off and tumbled along the street while I was riding about 15 mph. No problems, barely a nick in the rubberized armored covering.
I just replaced the depleted 5-hour battery module with the larger 8-hour, and haven't yet run it dry during a single session. The only quirk I noticed was the 8-hour battery runtime was only about 2-3 hours the first time, 3-4 hours the second charge, and 5 hours or more the third. I plan to run it dry from a full charge next time. Drift says this is normal for the first few uses of the 8-hour battery and recommends running it until fully discharged a couple of times, and recharging completely. So I've followed that practice. We'll see. If it runs longer than 5 hours next ride, I'll buy another for my backup Ghost X.
They also sell 4k versions but I have no use for that. My PCs are too old and slow to handle 4k and I don't have a YouTube channel and don't do anything creative. It's just traffic documentation for evidence if I'm hit again by a negligent driver, wildlife on rural rides, whatever. My family and friends know I run video every ride so hopefully if I'm unconscious they'll ask the investigators to look for my camera(s).
Note: I've run video on almost every ride from 2015-2018. The one time I didn't, because I'd forgotten to recharge the camera (an older Ion with 90 minute runtime -- I could have strapped on a USB battery pack and cable and recharged while recording, but didn't do so that day), was the day I was hit by a car that failed to yield on a flashing yellow left turn and smacked me down. I had the green traffic light and pedestrian walk signal, so the flashing yellow on left was a safety hazard, but common in my city. No video evidence. Cop was at the intersection but shrugged it off and wrote it up implying that I failed to dodge the errant driver. Took three years to settle, didn't even cover my medical expenses. I will never ride without video again. Even on fast group or solo rides, it doesn't weigh that much. And the Drift cameras are sorta wedge shaped and fairly aerodynamic. I usually mount them front and rear on the bike, or on the top of my helmet.
The Ghost X original came with a 5-hour battery pack, and it delivered an honest 5-hour runtime the first year on at least 200 rides, many of those several hours long. It gradually dropped to about 4 hours for the second year, and rapidly declined in about a month or so recently. I replaced it with the 8-hour battery module, which I think is now standard on the Ghost X.
Basic HD video to 1080/60p, good image quality, color, contrast, dynamic range, etc., better than most at night. But don't expect reliable recording of US license plates at night. US plates are too small, seemingly by design to thwart surveillance. Many traffic documentary video cameras are reviewed in England or elsewhere in Europe where license plates are larger and easier to record, giving an impression that they'll perform similarly in the US. Meh, don't count on it. Daytime, sure. Nighttime, depends on the angle of the light, whether the plates are black characters on white, etc.
No image stabilization. No preview/review screen, just a simple lighted LCD control screen. It's easier to set the camera from the phone app. Plenty of modes and options, including continuous recording, or always-on but not recording until the user presses a button to save the previous 30 seconds or so and subsequent 30-60 seconds. I don't use that option. I know from having been hit by cars it's unlikely I'll remember to hit the save button, or my arm might be disabled, or I might be unconscious. So I use the "Car DVD" mode, which records and saves continuously, in 5 minute segments, until the media card is filled or the battery runs out. The 5-hour battery needs a 64 GB card, otherwise it'll begin to overwrite from the earliest files with 32GB or smaller cards. The 8-hour battery probably needs a 128GB card, which I don't have yet.
They're designed in England (not sure about assembled from parts made in Asia), primarily for motorcycle/scooter commuters. The cameras come with two basic mounting shoes that use heavy duty and dependable 3M adhesive: one is slightly concave, the other flat, to accommodate most motorcycle helmets on the side or top, or luggage carriers, rear racks, etc.
However to get the desired angle when top-mounting on my Bell Formula MIPS and POC Omne Air SPIN helmets, I used Blue Tack and 3M adhesive putty, which is detachable but sticks extremely reliably. Never had a failure in years of using the stuff for purposes beyond the manufacturers' designs. It's more like heavy duty Post-It Note adhesive than gummy adhesives, with a consistency and tack similar to Silly Putty, but far more secure. Peeling it off just takes a little patience to carefully lift it from an edge and gradually work it away from the surface. So far it's never damaged any surface to which I've applied it: bicycle helmets, photographic prints on RC paper (family snapshots), painted walls, exterior brick (to temporarily hold wire antennas for my shortwave radios, to hide them from the landlord), etc.
Very rugged, durable and dependable. It comes reasonably weather-resistant. I've ridden in rain several times, no leaks or internal fogging. A weatherproof housing is available but I've never needed it. I've dropped one a few times, no problems. I neglected to securely snap the camera into the stem mount once and it bounced off and tumbled along the street while I was riding about 15 mph. No problems, barely a nick in the rubberized armored covering.
I just replaced the depleted 5-hour battery module with the larger 8-hour, and haven't yet run it dry during a single session. The only quirk I noticed was the 8-hour battery runtime was only about 2-3 hours the first time, 3-4 hours the second charge, and 5 hours or more the third. I plan to run it dry from a full charge next time. Drift says this is normal for the first few uses of the 8-hour battery and recommends running it until fully discharged a couple of times, and recharging completely. So I've followed that practice. We'll see. If it runs longer than 5 hours next ride, I'll buy another for my backup Ghost X.
They also sell 4k versions but I have no use for that. My PCs are too old and slow to handle 4k and I don't have a YouTube channel and don't do anything creative. It's just traffic documentation for evidence if I'm hit again by a negligent driver, wildlife on rural rides, whatever. My family and friends know I run video every ride so hopefully if I'm unconscious they'll ask the investigators to look for my camera(s).
Likes For canklecat:
#5
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 755
Bikes: 2019 CAAD12, 2015 Specialized Sirrus Comp
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 562 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 64 Times
in
46 Posts
Drift Ghost X looks good. Yours is helmet mounted? Ever find a need for both rear AND front?
Last edited by Robert A; 11-20-22 at 12:54 AM.
#6
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
Drift's own mounts are functional but not compact or good looking, or at least discreet. I mount the front under the handlebar on the stem, with the camera upside down. Not a problem with the Drift cameras because a damped ring around the lens adjusts the video orientation to wherever the user chooses. (I'm guessing it either rotates the sensor, or sends a signal to the camera to reorient the video, not sure which)
But the rear mount has been tricky with some of my bikes. It's fine on my old school steel bike and my 1993 Trek 5900 OCLV. I can mount the rig low enough that the protruding thumb screws on the clamp don't jab me. But I haven't been able to find a way to mount the rear camera on my 2010-ish Diamondback Podium 5 in a way that the thumbscrews don't rub the insides of my thighs.
So when I'm on the Diamondback I mount one camera on my helmet and skip the second camera. I can look pretty much wherever I need to, but there's a risk I'll miss recording someone hitting me from behind. In my experience riding bicycles and motorcycles, the biggest danger is being hit from behind at an intersection while stopping for red lights, stop signs, or even slowing out of caution. I've lost track of the number of times I've been hit from behind since I began two-wheel commuting in the 1970s -- and a few times when I was driving a car. And the negligent drivers always say the same stupid thing: "Oops, I didn't see you." Didn't see me. Right, Directly. In. Front. Of. Them. In. Broad. Daylight. With flashing lights, etc.
A couple of times I tried mounting the front camera on the stem as usual, and wearing the second camera on the helmet facing the rear. But it's not intuitive, trying to remember how to orient my head to actually capture anything useful behind me. So I gave up on that idea.
I'm scheduled for an ablation procedure in December to zap the neck nerves to deaden the pain. If it's effective I might switch to mostly the helmet mounted camera.
But I'm still looking for a better solution to the rear facing camera mounted on the seat post. I might use a moto tool to grind down the oversized plastic thumbscrew knobs. Or see if I can adapt a mount designed for a GoPro to fit the Drift cameras.
#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Australia
Posts: 823
Bikes: 2002 Trek 5200 (US POSTAL), 2020 Canyon Aeroad SL
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 313 Post(s)
Liked 680 Times
in
327 Posts
A GoPro is probably the "gold standard" for video quality. Battery life is way down though. We're talking an hour or two tops. With a GoPro you really do need an external battery pack plugged into it. A GoPro Hero would make a very good front or rear camera if you don't mind also having the battery packs strapped to your bike.
I've never really bothered with a front mounted safety camera. The new Cycliq Fly 12 Sport looks good though.
#8
Senior Member
I use a GoPro 10 mounted on my handlebar for YT video. I also own a Drift Ghost XL that I sometimes use for longer rides. The battery life on the Ghost is 8+ hours but the image quality does not come close to the GoPro. I had not thought of mounting the Ghost as a rear facing camera. You would need to engineer a mount but I adapted it to connect with a GoPro type mount. Sound is another issue with the Ghost. The builtin mic does not pickup much sound. Motorcyclists mount the Ghost on the side or top of their helmets.
#9
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Upstate SC
Posts: 1,703
Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 820 Post(s)
Liked 1,655 Times
in
782 Posts
I use the Varia radar/light/camera on the rear, and a GoPro Hero 8 facing forward on the bars with an external pack to power it (which means you have to change the battery door, and it's no longer water resistant, so be careful riding if it's going to rain.)
I've caught footage of intentional close passes (Varia captures the car actually moving closer towards me) and then the GoPro grabbed the rear plate as he passed. Video was sent to the local sheriff, and the driver was cited.
Likes For Bald Paul:
#10
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: 757
Posts: 11,250
Bikes: Madone, Emonda, 5500, Ritchey Breakaway
Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 10236 Post(s)
Liked 5,183 Times
in
2,225 Posts
I have the garmin Varia camera, and have not had any issues with it. I run it at 720 just to help battery life, and the picture quality is really clean. I was surprised, the initial reviews were not that good. It doesn’t what I need it to do.
My only complaint is the mount. The one that comes with it, just isn’t that great, I have had the rubber band type fastener come off on a couple of rides.
My only complaint is the mount. The one that comes with it, just isn’t that great, I have had the rubber band type fastener come off on a couple of rides.
#11
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Australia
Posts: 823
Bikes: 2002 Trek 5200 (US POSTAL), 2020 Canyon Aeroad SL
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 313 Post(s)
Liked 680 Times
in
327 Posts
I really wish it used the standard Garmin quarter-turn mount like everything else, but I guess that wasn't secure enough for the beefier unit.
#12
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: 757
Posts: 11,250
Bikes: Madone, Emonda, 5500, Ritchey Breakaway
Mentioned: 3 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 10236 Post(s)
Liked 5,183 Times
in
2,225 Posts
Oh wow that's not good! My rubber band seems super tight, hard to get on/off so I hope it doesn't ever come off during a ride. I actually bought a second mount (not cheap!) for my TT bike that I've cable tied to the bike for added security.
I really wish it used the standard Garmin quarter-turn mount like everything else, but I guess that wasn't secure enough for the beefier unit.
I really wish it used the standard Garmin quarter-turn mount like everything else, but I guess that wasn't secure enough for the beefier unit.
I wish the same. I had a 3d printed mounted made for the standard varia for my madone, I can’t use the varia camera on my madone currently.
#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
I use zip ties to reinforce mounts I don't trust for heavy or pricey devices. Works fine. Just remember to replace them every few months or once a year. Zip ties can become brittle after long exposure to sunlight.
#14
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 3,691
Bikes: Too many bikes, too little time to ride
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 430 Post(s)
Liked 460 Times
in
318 Posts
I ride with a Fly6. It's a few years old, not the latest model. It gives me piece of mind while I'm riding but I rarely pull the footage. A big reason for that is the image quality isn't so great. Maybe the newer model(s) have higher resolution and frame rate than mine, but the videos recorded on my unit is such that license plates can only be confidently read under really ideal conditions (adequate lighting, not too fast speed). My rides rarely exceed 2hrs long, but I feel like I've still got at least half the battery life remaining after a ride (guessing based on the beeps when the unit turns off/on), and that's with the lights running at max brightness for 1.5-2 hours.
Likes For tFUnK:
#15
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: 25 miles northwest of Boston
Posts: 29,549
Bikes: Bottecchia Sprint, GT Timberline 29r, Marin Muirwoods 29er, Trek FX Alpha 7.0
Mentioned: 112 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 5224 Post(s)
Liked 3,581 Times
in
2,342 Posts
Likes For rumrunn6:
#16
Senior Member
I purchased a Tooo Cycling camera a year ago and I’ve been very happy with it.
https://www.tooocycling.store
https://www.tooocycling.store
Likes For digger:
#17
Senior Member
The newest generation Cycliq Fly6 has a shorter battery life. They shrunk the overall size of the unit, but that meant using a smaller internal battery. I struggled to capture a full 4 hour ride.
A GoPro is probably the "gold standard" for video quality. Battery life is way down though. We're talking an hour or two tops. With a GoPro you really do need an external battery pack plugged into it. A GoPro Hero would make a very good front or rear camera if you don't mind also having the battery packs strapped to your bike.
I've never really bothered with a front mounted safety camera. The new Cycliq Fly 12 Sport looks good though.
A GoPro is probably the "gold standard" for video quality. Battery life is way down though. We're talking an hour or two tops. With a GoPro you really do need an external battery pack plugged into it. A GoPro Hero would make a very good front or rear camera if you don't mind also having the battery packs strapped to your bike.
I've never really bothered with a front mounted safety camera. The new Cycliq Fly 12 Sport looks good though.
The Cycliq stuff is so "almost there" that it's frustrating. The company has just terrible tech support and warranty support. The lighting on both the front and the back is just marginal. And then they decide to go with a copy of a Garmin mount that is incompatible. I'd rate the new version of the Fly12 as a better but I think the new version of the rear light is as step backwards. Unfortunately they are pretty much the only game out there now. The Garmin solution isn't there yet in terms of either video quality, size or mounts but I suspect they will refine that in future versions. I just wish they'd hurry up.
Right now, I wouldn't buy the Cycliq rear light but I would buy the front light and run it under an out front computer mount. The rear light is not adequate IMO for a rear facing day light flasher. So I'm thinking that a high and tight GoPro mount under the saddle with maybe the Drift Ghost camera with a real taillight/radar below would be useful. The idea that Garmin has where they automatically only record when the radar sees something is a good one that I hope they expand in future versions.
I use a GoPro 10 mounted on my handlebar for YT video. I also own a Drift Ghost XL that I sometimes use for longer rides. The battery life on the Ghost is 8+ hours but the image quality does not come close to the GoPro. I had not thought of mounting the Ghost as a rear facing camera. You would need to engineer a mount but I adapted it to connect with a GoPro type mount. Sound is another issue with the Ghost. The builtin mic does not pickup much sound. Motorcyclists mount the Ghost on the side or top of their helmets.
#18
Serious Cyclist
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: RVA
Posts: 9,308
Bikes: Emonda SL6
Mentioned: 97 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Quoted: 5721 Post(s)
Liked 261 Times
in
99 Posts
@seypat was nice enough to loan me a couple of Drift Ghost XL cameras for exactly this purpose (safety recording on a loop), but of course I've been preoccupied and haven't had a chance to mess with the mounts to get them fitted properly on my bike yet. Reading stories of hit and runs has reminded me of why these are important, so I'll make a point of getting them mounted for my next outdoor ride. I also have a GoPro Hero 8 for just recording pretty things during rides that I expect will have much better image quality with stabilization and higher resolution, but the Ghost isn't intended to serve that purpose, plus the GoPro lasts less than 1 hour on a full charge.
#19
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 755
Bikes: 2019 CAAD12, 2015 Specialized Sirrus Comp
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 562 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 64 Times
in
46 Posts
@seypat was nice enough to loan me a couple of Drift Ghost XL cameras for exactly this purpose (safety recording on a loop), but of course I've been preoccupied and haven't had a chance to mess with the mounts to get them fitted properly on my bike yet. Reading stories of hit and runs has reminded me of why these are important, so I'll make a point of getting them mounted for my next outdoor ride. I also have a GoPro Hero 8 for just recording pretty things during rides that I expect will have much better image quality with stabilization and higher resolution, but the Ghost isn't intended to serve that purpose, plus the GoPro lasts less than 1 hour on a full charge.
#20
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2021
Location: SoCal
Posts: 2,296
Bikes: Cuevas Custom, Cimmaron, 1988 "Pinalized Rockma", 1984 Trek 510, Moulton custom touring, Raleigh Competition GS, Bridgestone Mb-2 & 3, 1980's Peugeot - US, City, & Canyon Express (6)
Mentioned: 26 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1096 Post(s)
Liked 3,738 Times
in
1,836 Posts
FYI - Well y'all go me curious, so I took a peek.
Drift Ghost X - 5hr battery life (as confirmed above)
Drift Ghost XL - claims 9hr battery life! so even if it knocks down to 7-8hrs after a few hundred rides that should still be plenty.
Drift Ghost X - 5hr battery life (as confirmed above)
Drift Ghost XL - claims 9hr battery life! so even if it knocks down to 7-8hrs after a few hundred rides that should still be plenty.
Last edited by SoCaled; 12-01-22 at 05:22 PM. Reason: added "X"
Likes For SoCaled:
#21
Over the hill
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 24,376
Bikes: Giant Defy, Giant Revolt
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 998 Post(s)
Liked 1,206 Times
in
692 Posts
I have the Teentok one and it gets over 5 hours if you keep the light off. Pretty good images, too. I can read license plates if the car comes anywhere near me.
__________________
It's like riding a bicycle
It's like riding a bicycle
Likes For urbanknight: