Yesterday I decided to have a go at filming a bike trip I had planned across town to view a property I'm interested in.. I haven't had any success in finding a special purpose mini bike camera, so I decided to try using my Toshiba Camileo S10 pocket flip camcorder, which I somewhat precariously wedged into my handlebar bag..
I recorded the 45 minute trip using the camera's lowest resolution (VGA mode) to reduce file size as I was limited to a 2GB card..
Here is the result...
YouTube - ebike ride across town (1/3)
YouTube - ebike ride across town (2/3)
YouTube - ebike ride across town (3/3)
Camera shake is terrible (this is even with the camera's image stabilisation feature enabled)...camera shake aside, the video quality came out surprisingly well for VGA mode..this is a HD camera capable of 1080p filming... The 36 min journey took up 600MB of storage space (read my video comment to see why the footage is 10 minutes shorter than it should be - I had a wee mishap!)
Although the S10 is an excellent little camera, it didn't attract the kind of following the big names like Flip, Kodak and others attracted. In my opinion the Toshiba S10 is by far the best of the bunch.. they can frequently be picked up inexpensively on eBay (I paid just £37 for mine "as new").. the only problem is, small as it is, it's not the best design camera for filming on a bike as you need the LCD flipped out to film, so it's not practical to wear it around your neck or in a pocket like you can with the Flip and Kodak cameras.
In anycase I'm convinced now from my experiments so far with different cameras, that mounting *any* camera on the actual bike is a bad idea as they just pick up too much vibration and movement. I'm sure helmet or body mounting is the way to go..or perhaps a camera with very good image stabilisation or some clever mounting device?
It's certainly got me interested in exploring other cameras and experimenting further..

I recorded the 45 minute trip using the camera's lowest resolution (VGA mode) to reduce file size as I was limited to a 2GB card..
Here is the result...
YouTube - ebike ride across town (1/3)
YouTube - ebike ride across town (2/3)
YouTube - ebike ride across town (3/3)
Camera shake is terrible (this is even with the camera's image stabilisation feature enabled)...camera shake aside, the video quality came out surprisingly well for VGA mode..this is a HD camera capable of 1080p filming... The 36 min journey took up 600MB of storage space (read my video comment to see why the footage is 10 minutes shorter than it should be - I had a wee mishap!)
Although the S10 is an excellent little camera, it didn't attract the kind of following the big names like Flip, Kodak and others attracted. In my opinion the Toshiba S10 is by far the best of the bunch.. they can frequently be picked up inexpensively on eBay (I paid just £37 for mine "as new").. the only problem is, small as it is, it's not the best design camera for filming on a bike as you need the LCD flipped out to film, so it's not practical to wear it around your neck or in a pocket like you can with the Flip and Kodak cameras.
In anycase I'm convinced now from my experiments so far with different cameras, that mounting *any* camera on the actual bike is a bad idea as they just pick up too much vibration and movement. I'm sure helmet or body mounting is the way to go..or perhaps a camera with very good image stabilisation or some clever mounting device?
It's certainly got me interested in exploring other cameras and experimenting further..
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