How I mounted a camera to a modular helmet, but...
Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2017 12:54 pm
I wanted to record some of my rides so I bought a new SJCAM M20 camera that is suppose to produce videos almost as good as a GoPro, but for half the price. It came with a lot of accessories that GoPro makes you buy as extras. It can record at up to 2K, has gyro stabilization, and has built-in WiFi. The mounting accessories are compatible with GoPro, too. The quality of the videos look pretty good to me, accept under low-light, then it gets grainy and blurry.
Since I have no experience with video recording or with editing videos, I thought this would be a good and inexpensive way to get started. I still haven't figured out how to do any video editing yet, but at least I have he camera mounted. I love modular helmets, but when it came time to mount a camera on mine, I realized it wasn't going to be that easy since one must take into account the part that flips up covers half the top of the helmet, plus my particular helmet has a ventilation setup on top of the helmet. The problem with having the camera on the helmet is trying to keep my head still, not make sudden fast movements, but still watch out for traffic and pedestrians. I tried mounting the camera to the scooter at first, but there's just too much vibration. I thought about a chest strap type mount, but I'm not sure that would work well either. What have others done to get decent ride videos? I guess I can learn how to edit out unwanted portions of a video. Anyone have any suggestions for a free video editing software? I tried uploading raw, unedited video files to YouTube, but a 3 minute video at 1080i/60 takes over 2 hours. That can't be right, but I haven't a clue.
Since I have no experience with video recording or with editing videos, I thought this would be a good and inexpensive way to get started. I still haven't figured out how to do any video editing yet, but at least I have he camera mounted. I love modular helmets, but when it came time to mount a camera on mine, I realized it wasn't going to be that easy since one must take into account the part that flips up covers half the top of the helmet, plus my particular helmet has a ventilation setup on top of the helmet. The problem with having the camera on the helmet is trying to keep my head still, not make sudden fast movements, but still watch out for traffic and pedestrians. I tried mounting the camera to the scooter at first, but there's just too much vibration. I thought about a chest strap type mount, but I'm not sure that would work well either. What have others done to get decent ride videos? I guess I can learn how to edit out unwanted portions of a video. Anyone have any suggestions for a free video editing software? I tried uploading raw, unedited video files to YouTube, but a 3 minute video at 1080i/60 takes over 2 hours. That can't be right, but I haven't a clue.
