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41 points
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I was once rear ended at a red light. I was knocked unconscious and the driver drove off. A few kind witnesses called police who took a report. They got half his plate imprinted on my bumper, but never tracked him down. I had State Farm, and I was even paying extra for the ā€œuninsured driver coverageā€. They said they couldnā€™t cover it because until they had another driverā€™s information I was automatically at fault, even with the police report and witness accounts. They said it didnā€™t count as uninsured driver because itā€™s possible the guy had insurance. I was flabbergasted.

In the end I had a concussion and needed to take time off work for recovery and my short term disability insurance ended up suing State Farm because they didnā€™t want to pay for my medical treatment. State Farm agreed to cover medical care but only if it was recorded as my fault and I paid my deductible. In anger I tried to switch insurance companies but found out they have a shared database and since it was recorded as a hit and run my fault, nobody else would take me. And State Farm jacked my rate up 30%ā€¦

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18 points

I realised in a similar, though less detrimental, encounter that true insurance comes in the form of dash cameras. For the equivalent of an insurance payment or two, a high fidelity video of the entire vehicle surroundings can be had.

Honestly though, with a few witnesses and half a plate, itā€™s a surprise they couldnā€™t find the car that drove into you. Decerning the colour, and style of car, surely itā€™d be only a handful of vehicles matching both the description and the numbers.

Iā€™m sorry that happened to you.

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21 points

That would require a cop to do more than the bate minimum, so its just not gonna happen.

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6 points
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Do you have any recommendations for dash camera solutions like you mention? Iā€™ve been telling myself I need to get a dash cam but every time I start researching what to buy I feel like the market is a sea of wanky information and itā€™s hard to tell what is crap and what is solid.

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8 points

I have Viofo 129 Pros. Looks like they now have a 229 Pro in various bundles.

At the time, I looked into various brands and models and was consistently finding so many models were the same device with a different brand on them. That was a huge turn off because it means no firmware updates, support, or a real company behind the product.

Hereā€™s what I was looking for and think is good to be mindful of:

No large display screen

I didnā€™t want something with a huge display screen, because I donā€™t want my view to be obstructed by stuff on the windscreen.

No built in secondary camera

A secondary, driver facing camera built in. To achieve a second camera, in my opinion, the main exterior facing camera quality must be compromised to maintain overall price parity with single camera competitors.

Also, on the topic of insurance, thereā€™s absolutely nothing an insurance company would see on the driver facing video that would be to your benefit. Theyā€™ll claim you didnā€™t look down at the speedometer once the entire drive before your accident and therefore they believe you to have been speeding. This also applies to law enforcement in my opinion. Everything you say / provide can and will be used against you.

Additive secondary camera

A number of models, Viofo included, have a input port on them to allow a second camera to be used to combine footage. Think of any video youā€™ve seen where the front facing footage has a smaller rear facing video in the corner. These arenā€™t bad, but I noticed that most of the rear facing cameras are lower resolution than the main camera. To me, this doesnā€™t make a lot of sense as thereā€™s the same likelihood of an incident behind me as in front of me. This might not be an issue anymore, given its been five or so years since I bought mine, the new models might be 4k 60fps all the way around.

A minor detail is also that with additive cameras, a portion of the front view is obstructed in the recording by the rear view. Maybe this is circumventable, and they save as multiple files independently, I donā€™t know. The resolution thing bothered me more.

Personally, I donā€™t have rear specific cameras. All of mine are the 129 Pro model, each set to the same video settings. Iā€™m kind of particular and wanted full 360Ā° coverage, so each of our vehicles have four cameras, front, rear, and both sides. Obviously not exactly economical to start out, but one of the side cameras already paid for the entire camera set up in a sense as it captured someone breaking into a neighbourā€™s house and lead to arrests and prosecution. I call that a win.

Tactile buttons only

Capacitive buttons are garbage and should be outlawed in vehicles as you canā€™t feel for them. More specifically though, a dedicated toggle button for microphone recording. I like to have mine on in the event I need to read a license plate, or I am in an accident significant enough where recording a final message to family would be important.

That said, I do regularly turn the mic off when there are private conversations taking place, and this is important enough to me I feel itā€™s worth mentioning.

Night performance

The hard truth is that night vision is these cameras is never going to be great as the sensors are pretty small and they tend to adjust to your headlights anyway, but the Viofo cameras Iā€™ve had have all been able to read a plate when illuminated. I wouldnā€™t count on it though, also read aloud the plate so the mic picks it up.

Parking modes

Most cameras have some for of parking mode, where they activate when it senses the vehicle get bumped. They do this with a g force sensor.

Not all, but some cameras, including Viofo, also have motion sensing abilities, so they will record a set length (5 or 10 minutes) after they see something move. These tend to have sensitivity options which is great if you live in a windy area with trees, because then itā€™ll basically be on all night.

Thereā€™s also just a time lapse option for when the vehicle is off, and the camera will just take a low frame rate video - as in 10 frames per minute - and kick up the frame rate if it sees something or experiences movement. In my mind this is the best of both worlds, so this is what mine are set to.

GPS

Some reviews I came across way back when were finding some cameras had GPS data displayed on the video with no option to turn it off. This data included the current speed of the vehicle. This circles back to giving the insurer or authority data that can incriminate you. You were going 55 in a 50 and so itā€™s your fault an inebriated driver went through a red light and slammed into you. No thanks.

That said, I do have the GPS coordinates displayed on mine. In the event the vehicle is stolen and found ditched somewhere, thereā€™s a slim possibility the coordinates could come in handy. Unlike the speed display, the insurer would have to calculate travel speed based off changing coordinates which would be changing at a non standard rate. I find this an acceptable hurdle that an insurer would not traverse.

Capacitor, no battery

No nuance here, batteries tend to swell in the heat experienced by vehicles in the summer sun. Instead, having a capacitor solves this issue.

Memory card

Get the fastest and highest capacity SD card the camera you get will accept. No sense spending money on a good camera if the card fails you. This is a guide to understanding various SD card related terms. It has a good comparison table partway down.

Adhesive mounting, no suction cups

I prefer a bracket with adhesive that the camera clips into instead of a suction cup. Iā€™ve had suction cups let go in both heat and cold. Itā€™s difficult to achieve the same angle once itā€™s fallen off. Also, this happening while driving can be startling.

Versatility

Bit of a unique situation to my use case, but I often remove a couple cameras to attach to my bike when going on a ride with a lot of road riding, or sometimes with my family. I have mounts on my bikes I just clip them into and I slip a USB power pack in a pouch with a cable running to the cameras. Basically this letā€™s me not have dedicated bike cameras.

Insurance on your insurance

As I mentioned before, the camera can be considered your insurance policy. Something I recommend to anyone that asks about dash cameras is to consider guarding your possession of the camera a tertiary insurance policy.

If you are ever involved in an accident, donā€™t say a thing to anyone about the video evidence. Best case scenario, it throws a would be liar a curveball and they admit whatever fault is theirs. In my opinion, itā€™s not worth bringing up because of the risk that someone is desperate enough, they might try to commandeer the camera from your vehicle. This also helps trap someone in a lie should they go that route.

Final paranoia

I addition to your primary insurance (policy), your secondary insurance (the camera), and your tertiary insurance (not volunteering the footage), I also practice a fourth level of insanity - I mean insurance - whereby I keep extra SD cards in the vehicle so following an accident, I can quickly replace the cards with the accident footage on them with empty cards to record the aftermath.

This way if anyone sees the camera in the windscreen and removes the card or even the entire camera, Iā€™m still covered. These extra cards arenā€™t huge capacity, maybe enough for an hour of footage.

I didnā€™t realise I had quite so much to say on this topic. Hopefully the insane parts were outweighed by the useful parts haha.

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2 points

Commenting here so i can check replies, as i also need recommendations.

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2 points

State Farm also screwed over a guy I know. He dumped their policy after they wouldnā€™t pay anything on his accident (much less dramatic than yours) where they had some kind of parking related crash with 2 of their cars at home. State Farm told him that he could not be covered for an accident with another car on his policy because he ā€œcanā€™t sue himselfā€ so it sounds like they are only paying out when they have someone to sue about it.

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