It is sharp and extremely stable, if not quite as color-rich as what we’ve seen on other like-priced dash cams. The V1’s 170-degree, 1080p video quality is a mixed bag. There’s probably no legal benefit, as anyone could enter the info, but if you use the camera with different vehicles, this will tell you which one you were in. But it does have one feature that’s new to us: You can enter your license plate number for watermarking your videos. The Rexing V1 skips driver-safety features such as lane departure or collision warnings. As long as you’re careful aligning the unit horizontally when you mount it, the adhesive is probably your better option. The Rexing DashCam V1 mounts flush with the windshield, though a $6 suction mount is also available. You’ll know if you need to do this when the first profanity pops into your head. Note that cooling the double-sided adhesive tape (in the fridge if necessary) makes it much easier to remove the protective film. The V1 mounts with adhesive, but the adhesive and the mount are separate. The mounting did seem to affect the video somewhat-more on that later. You might consider using a level when mounting the unit, so you don’t wind up with horizontal skew in your video. The Rexing V1 mounts flush to the windshield, and the camera element rotates vertically to match the horizon. As a bonus, it’s handy for placing those interesting sites on your road trips that you may not have had time to stop and view properly. Why? Having GPS info on your video could be the difference between winning and losing your claim, or lawsuit.
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