Alternative to Go-Pro?
#1
Thread Starter
♋ ☮♂ ☭ ☯
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 7,902
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From: 40205 'ViLLeBiLLie
Bikes: Sngl Spd's, 70's- 80's vintage, D-tube Folder
Alternative to Go-Pro?
I always troll around the 'net looking for weird lights and other stuff that might benefit my commuter bike and ran across this:
https://www.misdefenseproducts.com/Sp...B-p-22026.html
Seems like it might be a cheepo but useable alternative to a Go-Pro?
Sorry if this stuff has been posted before
https://www.misdefenseproducts.com/Sp...B-p-22026.html
Seems like it might be a cheepo but useable alternative to a Go-Pro?
Sorry if this stuff has been posted before
#2
I use this https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 . It's cheap enough, so I bought two.
I put one in front and one at the back of the bike. So far, it works great. The video quality is not HD, but good enough.
My only complaint is, the clip's retainer pin won't stay put. I solved that by applying Gorilla glue.
Might buy this after the Holidays.
https://www.amazon.com/Looxcie-LX2-We...ywords=looxcie
I put one in front and one at the back of the bike. So far, it works great. The video quality is not HD, but good enough.
My only complaint is, the clip's retainer pin won't stay put. I solved that by applying Gorilla glue.
Might buy this after the Holidays.
https://www.amazon.com/Looxcie-LX2-We...ywords=looxcie
Last edited by DVC45; 11-30-13 at 09:55 PM.
#3
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Joined: Dec 2012
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From: South Austin, Texas
Bikes: 2010 Origin8 CX700, 2003 Cannondale Backroads Cross Country, 1997 Trek mtn steel frame converted commuter/tourer, 1983 Univega Sportour, 2010 Surly LHT, Others...
https://rideye.com
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...-for-your-bike


[HR][/HR]
Rideye Has Your Back
Riding a bike will always be the best way to commute and explore. But every time we strap on our helmets, we accept that cycling is a dangerous activity.
If you ride where there are cars, incidents are an unfortunate certainty. Rideye protects you from false claims and shows what happened when you can't.
[HR][/HR]
Rideye Remembers Everything
Rideye records continuously and saves the last 2.5 hours of video (10 hours for Rideye HC). In the event of an incident, a single press of the button stops recording and saves the file. If you can't do it yourself, Rideye's BlackBox sensor will do it for you when it detects a crash. With an ultra wide-angle lens and HD video quality, every detail is captured.
[HR][/HR]
Precisely Engineered
Rideye is unlike anything you've ever seen, and its design reflects that. We start with precision machined aircraft-grade aluminum and hard-anodize it for a brilliant, durable finish. The Lexan inlays are laser cut to a precise, water resistant fit, and sealed with an Armadillo scratch-resistant coating. Every part is manufactured without compromise.
Rideye looks beautiful on your bike. And it's built to last.
[HR][/HR]
Charge It Once A Month
Rideye uses state of the art lithium cells and efficient power management to achieve an impressive battery life of 24 hours.
Even if your daily commute is an hour long, Rideye will finish the month with charge to spare.
[HR][/HR]

More, here:
https://rideye.com
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...-for-your-bike
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...-for-your-bike


[HR][/HR]
Rideye Has Your Back
Riding a bike will always be the best way to commute and explore. But every time we strap on our helmets, we accept that cycling is a dangerous activity.
If you ride where there are cars, incidents are an unfortunate certainty. Rideye protects you from false claims and shows what happened when you can't.
[HR][/HR]
Rideye Remembers Everything
Rideye records continuously and saves the last 2.5 hours of video (10 hours for Rideye HC). In the event of an incident, a single press of the button stops recording and saves the file. If you can't do it yourself, Rideye's BlackBox sensor will do it for you when it detects a crash. With an ultra wide-angle lens and HD video quality, every detail is captured.
[HR][/HR]
Precisely Engineered
Rideye is unlike anything you've ever seen, and its design reflects that. We start with precision machined aircraft-grade aluminum and hard-anodize it for a brilliant, durable finish. The Lexan inlays are laser cut to a precise, water resistant fit, and sealed with an Armadillo scratch-resistant coating. Every part is manufactured without compromise.
Rideye looks beautiful on your bike. And it's built to last.
[HR][/HR]
Charge It Once A Month
Rideye uses state of the art lithium cells and efficient power management to achieve an impressive battery life of 24 hours.
Even if your daily commute is an hour long, Rideye will finish the month with charge to spare.
[HR][/HR]

More, here:
https://rideye.com
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...-for-your-bike
Last edited by AusTexMurf; 12-02-13 at 03:48 PM. Reason: redirected to kickstarter and rideye.com
#4
I always troll around the 'net looking for weird lights and other stuff that might benefit my commuter bike and ran across this:
https://www.misdefenseproducts.com/Sp...B-p-22026.html
Seems like it might be a cheepo but useable alternative to a Go-Pro?
Sorry if this stuff has been posted before
https://www.misdefenseproducts.com/Sp...B-p-22026.html
Seems like it might be a cheepo but useable alternative to a Go-Pro?
Sorry if this stuff has been posted before

https://www.amazon.com/Sunglasses-Mob...ef=pd_sim_p_51
#5
Thread Starter
♋ ☮♂ ☭ ☯
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 7,902
Likes: 2
From: 40205 'ViLLeBiLLie
Bikes: Sngl Spd's, 70's- 80's vintage, D-tube Folder
I found it cheaper at Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/Sunglasses-Mob...ef=pd_sim_p_51
https://www.amazon.com/Sunglasses-Mob...ef=pd_sim_p_51
Thanks everybody, great stuff!!!
#6
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 2,285
Likes: 1
From: Kherson, Ukraine
Bikes: Old steel GT's, for touring and commuting
I use this https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 . It's cheap enough, so I bought two.
I put one in front and one at the back of the bike. So far, it works great. The video quality is not HD, but good enough.
My only complaint is, the clip's retainer pin won't stay put. I solved that by applying Gorilla glue.
Might buy this after the Holidays.
https://www.amazon.com/Looxcie-LX2-We...ywords=looxcie
I put one in front and one at the back of the bike. So far, it works great. The video quality is not HD, but good enough.
My only complaint is, the clip's retainer pin won't stay put. I solved that by applying Gorilla glue.
Might buy this after the Holidays.
https://www.amazon.com/Looxcie-LX2-We...ywords=looxcie
Good enough to read license plates?
#7
I use this https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 . It's cheap enough, so I bought two.
I put one in front and one at the back of the bike. So far, it works great. The video quality is not HD, but good enough.
My only complaint is, the clip's retainer pin won't stay put. I solved that by applying Gorilla glue.
..
I put one in front and one at the back of the bike. So far, it works great. The video quality is not HD, but good enough.
My only complaint is, the clip's retainer pin won't stay put. I solved that by applying Gorilla glue.
..
Finally, even after training myself to operate it blind without benefit of touch, after about a month it developed the problem of shutting itself off within a minute of operation. I hate to warn people off of a device this cool and cheap, but that's my experience. There's probably nothing inexpensive that works as well as a go-pro.
#8
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Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 8,162
Likes: 647
From: Brooklyn NY
Bikes: Kuota Kredo/Chorus, Trek 7000 commuter, Trek 8000 MTB and a few others
It really depends on what you want it for. If you are looking at taking high quality videos of all of your activities to post on YouTube, the GoPro is usually considered the best. But it is expensive, only the white version is inexpensive but it is really dumbed down. If all you want is a handlebar mounted cam to monitor activities, get something much cheaper. The SJ1000 takes decent video and is under $100 and comes with all kinds of mounts and a waterproof dive case. I'm going to buy that one myself. My big fear with buying one of the cameras, even the cheap one, is that I'll use it a few times and quickly get bored with it. I'm not going to sit at a computer for hours on end to edit the clips either. They'll just start collecting.
A Cinematography class should be a requirement for any video camera purchase. Spare your family and friends the endless videos.
A Cinematography class should be a requirement for any video camera purchase. Spare your family and friends the endless videos.
#9
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 2,285
Likes: 1
From: Kherson, Ukraine
Bikes: Old steel GT's, for touring and commuting
.
I've doing some research on this and in addition to not liking the shape* of the GoPro, and not being ready to cough up that much dough, what I've decided I'm going to get is one of the RD32II cameras. At about $140 the price seems okay, and the quality and features seem about right for what I want it for.
* Usually I don't make a big deal about "aero" but the GoPro is the exact opposite of it, and the idea of having it on top of my helmet along with my helmet light just seems ridiculous. That's one of the things I appreciate about the RD32II, instead of being apparently as wide and tall as possible, it is long-ish and should mount well to the side of a helmet.
I've doing some research on this and in addition to not liking the shape* of the GoPro, and not being ready to cough up that much dough, what I've decided I'm going to get is one of the RD32II cameras. At about $140 the price seems okay, and the quality and features seem about right for what I want it for.
* Usually I don't make a big deal about "aero" but the GoPro is the exact opposite of it, and the idea of having it on top of my helmet along with my helmet light just seems ridiculous. That's one of the things I appreciate about the RD32II, instead of being apparently as wide and tall as possible, it is long-ish and should mount well to the side of a helmet.
#11
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Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 43,586
Likes: 1,380
From: NW,Oregon Coast
Bikes: 8
So the Lawsuit Disputes requiring video evidence from traffic accidents , commuting, is that Rampant?
You wear a camera for doctor's and hospital visits?, might have to lawyer up and file suit,
against those many Insurance company claims denials..
You wear a camera for doctor's and hospital visits?, might have to lawyer up and file suit,
against those many Insurance company claims denials..
#12
When visiting the hospital or doctors' offices, the staff there may move quickly at times, but not at 20 to 40 mph speed differentials and outweigh you by several thousand pounds. Add in the fact that a video tends to eliminate a number of "You said, they said" circumstances.
#13
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C'dale BBU('05 and '09)/Super Six/Hooligan8and 3,Kona Dew Deluxe,Novara Buzz/Safari,Surly Big Dummy,Marin Pt Reyes,Giant Defy 1,Schwinn DBX SuperSport,Brompton S6L/S2E-X/M6L-X/S12 T Line

#14
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Joined: May 2010
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From: midwest
Bikes: 2018 Roubaix Expert Di2, 2016 Diverge Expert X1
#16
https://store.contour.com/ae/us/page/home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJVNOBE4L0s
This is a test video that I shot, just to check mounting positions and the mount. Held up, films in HD.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJVNOBE4L0s
This is a test video that I shot, just to check mounting positions and the mount. Held up, films in HD.
#17
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 919
Likes: 15
From: South Austin, Texas
Bikes: 2010 Origin8 CX700, 2003 Cannondale Backroads Cross Country, 1997 Trek mtn steel frame converted commuter/tourer, 1983 Univega Sportour, 2010 Surly LHT, Others...
https://store.contour.com/ae/us/page/home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJVNOBE4L0s
This is a test video that I shot, just to check mounting positions and the mount. Held up, films in HD.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJVNOBE4L0s
This is a test video that I shot, just to check mounting positions and the mount. Held up, films in HD.
Still, a good cam system.
#19
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,748
Likes: 10
From: Michigan
Bikes: Windsor Fens, Giant Seek 0 (2014, Alfine 8 + discs)
I've owned a GoPro Hero3 white, a Contour Roam, a Sony Actioncam, several generic chinese cameras including a pair of RD32IIs. My favorite of them all though is the new one I just got:
https://www.techmoan.com/blog/2013/11...nd-so-far.html
For $132 shipped, it is fairly small, mounts to helmets and bars in a much less stupid way than GoPros, comes with a bunch of mounts, a waterproof case, a waterproof RF remote control, takes standard Nokia cell phone batteries that cost about $3 and last > 2 hours, has single slide switch "on and start recording" and "stop and off" control when in the waterproof case, it's full 1080p and has really pretty respectable low light performance - probably not as good as the Hero3 black, but that's $400.
https://www.techmoan.com/blog/2013/11...nd-so-far.html
For $132 shipped, it is fairly small, mounts to helmets and bars in a much less stupid way than GoPros, comes with a bunch of mounts, a waterproof case, a waterproof RF remote control, takes standard Nokia cell phone batteries that cost about $3 and last > 2 hours, has single slide switch "on and start recording" and "stop and off" control when in the waterproof case, it's full 1080p and has really pretty respectable low light performance - probably not as good as the Hero3 black, but that's $400.
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Work: the 8 hours that separates bike rides.
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#21
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 2,285
Likes: 1
From: Kherson, Ukraine
Bikes: Old steel GT's, for touring and commuting
I've owned a GoPro Hero3 white, a Contour Roam, a Sony Actioncam, several generic chinese cameras including a pair of RD32IIs. My favorite of them all though is the new one I just got:
https://www.techmoan.com/blog/2013/11...nd-so-far.html
For $132 shipped, it is fairly small, mounts to helmets and bars in a much less stupid way than GoPros, comes with a bunch of mounts, a waterproof case, a waterproof RF remote control, takes standard Nokia cell phone batteries that cost about $3 and last > 2 hours, has single slide switch "on and start recording" and "stop and off" control when in the waterproof case, it's full 1080p and has really pretty respectable low light performance - probably not as good as the Hero3 black, but that's $400.
https://www.techmoan.com/blog/2013/11...nd-so-far.html
For $132 shipped, it is fairly small, mounts to helmets and bars in a much less stupid way than GoPros, comes with a bunch of mounts, a waterproof case, a waterproof RF remote control, takes standard Nokia cell phone batteries that cost about $3 and last > 2 hours, has single slide switch "on and start recording" and "stop and off" control when in the waterproof case, it's full 1080p and has really pretty respectable low light performance - probably not as good as the Hero3 black, but that's $400.
#22
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,748
Likes: 10
From: Michigan
Bikes: Windsor Fens, Giant Seek 0 (2014, Alfine 8 + discs)
I don't think the weight is a problem - it's also about the lightest camera I've owned. They'd probably drop 20 grams or so by removing the screen. I personally love the screen being there. I've owned cameras with and without, and I definitely like having a screen. The settings screens of GoPros is better than nothing but it's kind of miserable to use compared to a proper screen with navigation buttons.
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Work: the 8 hours that separates bike rides.
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#23
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 2,285
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From: Kherson, Ukraine
Bikes: Old steel GT's, for touring and commuting
It's already the slimmest camera of all those I owned. Taking the screen out wouldn't reduce the width more than about a millimeter - that's how far out the screen pushes past the width of the lens. The height and depth wouldn't change either - they're limited by the size of the battery. I'm not willing to buy any more cameras without replaceable batteries, because the battery ALWAYS fails before the camera does and I want to be able to just buy a new battery. For generic cameras with a low market share, using a cell phone battery is fantastic because they'll be available for many years even if the manufacturer goes out of business.
I don't think the weight is a problem - it's also about the lightest camera I've owned. They'd probably drop 20 grams or so by removing the screen. I personally love the screen being there. I've owned cameras with and without, and I definitely like having a screen. The settings screens of GoPros is better than nothing but it's kind of miserable to use compared to a proper screen with navigation buttons.
I don't think the weight is a problem - it's also about the lightest camera I've owned. They'd probably drop 20 grams or so by removing the screen. I personally love the screen being there. I've owned cameras with and without, and I definitely like having a screen. The settings screens of GoPros is better than nothing but it's kind of miserable to use compared to a proper screen with navigation buttons.
OK, great info! I said "slimmer" but I worded that poorly, what I meant was how tall it is, if it wouldn't be any smaller in any dimension (except a mm or so) then I think you've found the best one
Thanks again for all the great info!






