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Homemade Mapillary Hood Mount

Skippern님이 English로 2016년 7월 20일에 게시함.

I was challenged to find a way to mount my Garmin VIRB in such a way that it avoids the glare from the windshield, and that no part of the car is captured. After thinking hard about how to do it, I started looking for material to make it. Unfortunately the plastic and rubber I thought I needed was only sold in 10 square meter pieces, too expensive to be a reasonable solution, so I started looking at alternatives.

During fabrication

So I found a plastic and rubber tool for tile laying, and made a few cuts, so I could clamp it on the front of the hood, glued the VIRB socket mount to the plate, and drilled a few holes so that I could tie some strings to it.

Mounted on the car

I have done a small driving test (without securing strings, and without charging cable), and are satisfied with the result, and noted in lessons learned, that the securing string is necessary. The mount slowly slid out due to vibrations and gave my VIRB a flying test, luckily no traffic at the spot and I was able to stop immediately. No damages to VIRB or mount.

Driving test

Total price for the Mount: 15 BRL (~5USD)

Mapillary sequence here

위치: Bela Vista, Guarapari, Região Geográfica Imediata de Vitória, Greater Vitória, Região Geográfica Intermediária de Vitória, Espírito Santo, Southeast Region, 29211-990, Brazil
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토론

2016년 7월 20일 21:25Warin61님의 의견

People have been fined for mounting small cameras on the outside of their car in Australia. Reason being given is that they pose a hazard for any pedestrian that may get hit. I take it you have no problem with the fighting kites? Take care.

2016년 7월 20일 21:31Skippern님의 의견

Warin61: We’ll see, if I get any comments from law enforcement I’ll remove it in seconds, besides I havn’t heard about examples where it have happened here in Brazil as of yet. Not common with dash-cams or other car mounted cams yet.

2016년 7월 20일 22:47BushmanK님의 의견

I have a friend, who worked for car review magazine for more than five years. Now, they have fancy factory-made mounts, but before that, they successfully used removable suction cup handles made for carrying sheet materials such as glass, metal and plastics. This handle has two large suction cups, operated by two latches. Standard bicycle mount can be used to attach camera to handle itself. Suction cups have certain flexibility, so it’s easy to mount it onto any close-to-flat surface, such as hood or roof. If surface and cups are clean, no damage to paint will occur. Two independent mounting points decreasing possibility of accidental mount disengagement.

2016년 7월 20일 22:52Skippern님의 의견

The cost would be significantly higher, and it would require long delivery time since I most likely would have to order suction cup handles from abroad or specialist retailers. That kind of stuff isn’t shelf-ware where I live.

2016년 7월 21일 00:16BushmanK님의 의견

My Portugese is not that good, but “ventosa dupla transporte vidro” keywords gave me some links, including one to www.mercadolivre.com.br, which says, it’s widely available in Brazil. Price starts from 30 BRL not including delivery, but since it’s so widely available online, it should be in regular hardware stores too. (There are cheaper ones, but they are small and single, not double).

For sure, I’m not forcing you to do anything - it’s completely up to you, but your camera costs way more than that, as well as car body work in case if it will bump into hood or fender at pretty high speed and leave a dent.

2016년 7월 21일 00:23Skippern님의 의견

30BRL is more than double what I paid for my home-brew, and that would require I buy a bicycle mount as well, might do for the future, or I might acquire when I visit Europe. I’ll work with my home-brew for now. Besides it was kind of fun thinking out and solving it as well, can’t throw that away for something ready from a store ;)

2016년 7월 30일 12:45smaprs님의 의견

Hi Skippern. Fine, feel you’re catching in a good sense the brazilian way of doing (jeitinho). Only one thing I see that perhaps could help (as I felt in my own attempts to get better pics) is to place the camera, if possible, in the top of the car, so that it can avoid obstacles like the bush garden above to show more details around, pics from higher level (perhaps can double the level). Also can prevent the case of easy damaging the camera.

2016년 7월 30일 13:04Skippern님의 의견

smaprs: That is definitely something to think about when I get a vehicle where I can have the rig permanently mounted. Currently I depend on being able to remove and mount the rig quickly between vehicles. Depending on what will be my permanent vehicle (I am looking into investing in an Nissan Frontier 4x4), different ideas might be more realistic. The long term goal would be to have the rigg a little higher, and maybe all the way to the left-hand side of the hood.

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