Ivan
Guru
Here's a ride report documented by my under seat camera, the Mobius ActionCam. I had thought of this mounting location but only recently attempted it after being spurred on by Rick's similar mounting in his video (
)! Mine is stuck on using the inexpensive Mobius helmet mount which works excellently for this application. The safety strap also holds a USB battery pack which gives me 10+ hours recording time - more than enough for an always on traffic camera. Very discreet and stable! I prefer this to my helmet mounting cos I didn't like having the camera there regularly.
The new Mobius (if you buy now be sure you get the new one) has a 60% higher capacity battery that now records for a more respectable 2 hours. Great for catching ride highlights, but for use as an always on traffic cam for commuting, any camera would need an external pack that runs longer.
I was really pleased with how the free Garmin VIRB Edit software worked out. Now at ver 2.8 they have worked out a lot of kinks and I see no reason to pay for Dashware or RaceRender. I was looking for a free software solution and this is it! I had to pass my Mobius MP4 video through avidemux (very fast) before VIRB Edit would read my Mobius MP4, but I read online that GoPro MP4 imports no problem. VIRB Edit makes it easy to import Garmin FIT or any GPX file and sync the GPS data and video. I use a Garmin 810 but it will work with any GPX data. Garmin has really given the sports community a gift as you do all this with any video source and any GPS data. Even if you don't want to take the time to render and share your videos, VIRB Edit immediately plays back your HD video and overlays the GPS data with excellent quality in full screen so you can enjoy it on your computer.
My next attempt will be to replace the Mobius internal battery with a step-down voltage circuit (http://pages.ebay.com/link/?nav=item.view&alt=web&id=221546307672) that someone else showed worked well with the Mobius ActionCam. This allows it hook it up directly to my Li-Ion battery pack that runs my front light. Since I am running the light all the time for safety, my camera would always run whenever my lights are on. One less item to charge, and charging once a week for my commuting purposes! I tried to make the Mobius camera more weather resistant by adding some tape and clear epoxy inside the case. A side benefit for the epoxy inside the Mobius is that acts as a "light pipe" that refracts the LED lights making them much more visible than the old setup. But in a moderate rain today, the waterproofing didn't work. I don't have it yet, but I think I will go for the Joovuu waterproof case for the Mobius at only $15-20.
And now finally here is the video! While the front wheel is visible in the middle of the video, I find it adds character and context!
http://youtu.beHrDJqeGDxRc
http://youtu.be/HrDJqeGDxRc
The new Mobius (if you buy now be sure you get the new one) has a 60% higher capacity battery that now records for a more respectable 2 hours. Great for catching ride highlights, but for use as an always on traffic cam for commuting, any camera would need an external pack that runs longer.
I was really pleased with how the free Garmin VIRB Edit software worked out. Now at ver 2.8 they have worked out a lot of kinks and I see no reason to pay for Dashware or RaceRender. I was looking for a free software solution and this is it! I had to pass my Mobius MP4 video through avidemux (very fast) before VIRB Edit would read my Mobius MP4, but I read online that GoPro MP4 imports no problem. VIRB Edit makes it easy to import Garmin FIT or any GPX file and sync the GPS data and video. I use a Garmin 810 but it will work with any GPX data. Garmin has really given the sports community a gift as you do all this with any video source and any GPS data. Even if you don't want to take the time to render and share your videos, VIRB Edit immediately plays back your HD video and overlays the GPS data with excellent quality in full screen so you can enjoy it on your computer.
My next attempt will be to replace the Mobius internal battery with a step-down voltage circuit (http://pages.ebay.com/link/?nav=item.view&alt=web&id=221546307672) that someone else showed worked well with the Mobius ActionCam. This allows it hook it up directly to my Li-Ion battery pack that runs my front light. Since I am running the light all the time for safety, my camera would always run whenever my lights are on. One less item to charge, and charging once a week for my commuting purposes! I tried to make the Mobius camera more weather resistant by adding some tape and clear epoxy inside the case. A side benefit for the epoxy inside the Mobius is that acts as a "light pipe" that refracts the LED lights making them much more visible than the old setup. But in a moderate rain today, the waterproofing didn't work. I don't have it yet, but I think I will go for the Joovuu waterproof case for the Mobius at only $15-20.
And now finally here is the video! While the front wheel is visible in the middle of the video, I find it adds character and context!
http://youtu.beHrDJqeGDxRc
http://youtu.be/HrDJqeGDxRc