Go Pro or Data Logger

Go Pro or Data Logger

Author
Discussion

gt86fanboy

Original Poster:

2 posts

91 months

Thursday 15th September 2016
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Hi, I've done a couple of track days now and got the bug!

Now looking to get a in-car camera but rather than just have video I'd like to have some performance graphics on screen. Had a good look around and Go Pro seems the obvious choice but not sure how to get the graphics on there or how easy it is to do, I'm guessing most people use iPhone GPS or other Android app

Seen some videos taken with a Video VBox which has all the graphics but the picture quality isn't great - but seems to do it all itself.

I'd be interested to hear from anyone else who's used either of these to see what they think.

Cheers
David

C70R

17,596 posts

104 months

Friday 16th September 2016
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If you're prepared to do a bit of fiddling and have an Android phone, this is the route that I'm in the middle of going down (I already have the GoPro).
1) Download the GoPro app, the TrackAddict app and the Torque OBD2 app
2) Purchase a Bluetooth OBD2 dongle, and connect to the car/phone (Torque app is useful to check this is working)
3) Connect your phone to the GoPro via WiFi (the GoPro app is useful to set this up)
4) Launch the TrackAddict app and select data source (Bluetooth OBD2), video source (WiFi GoPro) and the track you're on
5) Drive
6) View your video, overlaid with GPS, speed and accelerometer readings from your phone, combined with RPM and throttle position readings from OBD

It's recommended that you get the Pro version of the TrackAddict app. I've managed to get all of this working on mine, but haven't tried it live on track yet.

Edited by C70R on Friday 16th September 10:21

Craikeybaby

10,411 posts

225 months

Friday 16th September 2016
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On an iPhone I understand Harry's laptimer does the same as mentioned above, including GoPro remote control.

88racing

1,748 posts

156 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
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The standard VBox (black plastic box) is only 480 lines (standard def) so by modern standards looks a bit pants, but with it you get 10 fixes per second GPS plus accelerometer accuracy plus excellent data analysis software. You'll learn a lot more from a VBox than a smartphone-based setup.

FlyingTrotter

311 posts

155 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
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What do you want it for ?

If it's for video record of laps and you just like the idea of posting to YouTube with the graphic surround then cobble together footage as has been suggested with a GoPro and some iPhone App - a bit fiddly but far cheaper and it can work pretty well

If you want the data to help improve your on track performance (I've to get quicker) then the Vbox offers more but it's primarily a driver training aid not a video capture system and the SD version whilst great as the training tool does have lower resolution video but the system is tried and tested and works well

If you want all of the above with higher quality video get the HD version of the Vbox but it a lot more expensive and perhaps for the money a shade compromised as in return for the better video resolution you lose elsewhere

So focus on precisely what you want from the kit and it should make the decision easier

88racing

1,748 posts

156 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
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BTW with the VBox HD properly mainstream now you might find some of the earlier Lite at reasonable prices. Beware though that use of the OLED display unit may cause problems on track days given you're not supposed to be timing yourself.

gt86fanboy

Original Poster:

2 posts

91 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
quotequote all
Thanks for the info, does sound a bit complicated though. Think I like the idea of a VBox that's just plug and go if I can live with the video quality.

theboyfold

10,921 posts

226 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
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Just buy a Garmin Virb XE and be done with it

https://buy.garmin.com/en-GB/GB/prod165499.html

Lagerlout

1,810 posts

236 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
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Cheers for this, really useful.

C70R

17,596 posts

104 months

Saturday 17th September 2016
quotequote all
theboyfold said:
Just buy a Garmin Virb XE and be done with it

https://buy.garmin.com/en-GB/GB/prod165499.html
But surely that would omit any diagnostic/car data and track overlays?

theboyfold

10,921 posts

226 months

Sunday 18th September 2016
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C70R said:
theboyfold said:
Just buy a Garmin Virb XE and be done with it

https://buy.garmin.com/en-GB/GB/prod165499.html
But surely that would omit any diagnostic/car data and track overlays?
It has built in GPS and g force sensors. Plus with Bluetooth you can hook it up to an OBD port to sync that with data. Then in the editing software you can build all your overlays. This is my mate driving my E36 328 which doesn't have an OBD port

https://youtu.be/9xXsfZgXTwE

Edited by theboyfold on Sunday 18th September 07:01

kaese

727 posts

187 months

Sunday 18th September 2016
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I've recently been through this decision myself - owning both a VBOX lite and GoPro simultaneously.

I found that, unless the VBOX is going to be constantly set-up on your track vehicle, it becomes a bit tiresome to install it on every track day. I was hooking it up to a BookaTrack Caterham, and it was taking around 20 mins to set up, and 10 minutes to remove each track day.

The novelty of the data capture eventually wore off, and I have since reverted back to the simplicity of the "plug and play" GoPro, complete with remote control app for checking the camera angle is correct. I also use a cheap computer microphone plugged into the GoPro to improve audio quality by trailing it down to the exhaust. Also bear in mind there's no native way of previewing what a VBOX (lite) is capturing without an additional LCD screen which is another additional cost.

So - as a previous poster mentioned - it really depends what you want it for!

Lagerlout

1,810 posts

236 months

Sunday 18th September 2016
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Not tried it in anger yet but just tested it sitting in the car. iPhone 6+, Kiwi 3 OBDII Bluetooth dongle, GoPro Hero 4 wifi on, TrackAddict app. Records whatever OBDII parameter you tell it to, and starts and records the Gopro automatically.

Can then combine the video file and the data files in RaceRender program PC/Mac to overlay whatever you want to on the video.

This will give you 4K quality with any overlays. It's not as simple as that Vibe above (1080p) but pretty easy to get working. When you're in the car, with the Kiwi 3 plugged into the OBD port, all you do is start the camera, start the app, tell it what track you're at and it'll start recording everything. Off to Castle Combe Wednesday so will try it then. 4K via the GoPro gives some stunning quality results even posted to YouTube.

Edited by Lagerlout on Sunday 18th September 15:15

theboyfold

10,921 posts

226 months

Sunday 18th September 2016
quotequote all
Lagerlout said:
Not tried it in anger yet but just tested it sitting in the car. iPhone 6+, Kiwi 3 Bluetooth, GoPro Hero 4 wifi on, TrackAddict app. Records whatever OBDII parameter you tell it to, and starts and records the Gopro automatically.

Can then combine the video file and the data files in RaceRender program PC/Mac to overlay whatever you want to on the video.

This will give you 4K quality with any overlays. It's not as simple as that Vibe above (1080p) but pretty easy to get working. When you're in the car, with the Kiwi 3 plugged into the OBD port, all you do is start the camera, start the app, tell it what track you're at and it'll start recording everything. Off to Castle Combe Wednesday so will try it then. 4K via the GoPro gives some stunning quality results even posted to YouTube.
That looks quite nice, I've never heard of Race Render before, looks like it'll be worth a play with the free version. Another bit of software to have a look at is Dashware. It's free and they were acquired by GoPro sometime ago. http://www.dashware.net

It makes me wonder if the next GoPro will have data logging in. I guess we will find out on Monday.

LaSource

2,622 posts

208 months

Sunday 18th September 2016
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I use a selection of GoPros and VB Lite to cover multiple needs: driver training, rapid zeroing into fastest lap without having to review hours of footage, the single lap upload to YouTube for sharing, etc

...however, I am a bit of a geek and can handle all the faffing around entailed by the VB setup.

I am finding now though that when recommending a data logger to friends some of them do not have the appetite for that level of complexity and for them a one box solution is more appropriate. One of the favourites at the moment seems to be Race Navigator (I think more popular in Europe). This is more of a dash top integrated unit, iOS integrated, and take seconds to swap between cars.

Personally, I'm still using my GoPros and vbox units smile

https://youtu.be/MBSuXLK7Pnw

MrNoisy

530 posts

141 months

Monday 19th September 2016
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I've had good results with Harry's laptimer. I use a Dual gps and go point obd, both connected to an iphone via Bluetooth.

It's not foolproof but is always evolving and has great support. Latest 'new' thing is heartrate monitoring with a compatible sensor.

A lot of the features are gimmicky but it does have some utility for improving yourself!

mark284811

99 posts

185 months

Wednesday 21st September 2016
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Feel free to have a look at one of my recent videos..

This video was captured on the new Race Logic VBOX HD2. It's vastly improved over the traditional VBox Lite and VBox HD.

It is however quite costly at approx £2500 depending on the options you pick.

However as a Racing Tool it will be invaluable in the data it provides on the laptop with regards to positioning on track and entry speeds etc etc.

https://youtu.be/7LkzrpHdhjc?t=2m34s

GreigM

6,728 posts

249 months

Thursday 22nd September 2016
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I've experimented with lots of combinations. Currently using my Racelogic PerformanceBox to capture data and overlaying it using RaceRender2 onto the GoPro video.

Here are some samples where I was experimenting with the overlays that RaceRender can produce (4 vids, each with different overlays):
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN0GNU3Mirf...

I'm also experimenting with Harry's Lap Timer controlling the GoPro and have a Garmin Glo as an external GPS receiver (phone GPS receivers really aren't accurate enough - lap times are an estimate at best) but find the UI in Harry's to be unhelpful - never sure if the GoPro is correctly recording (which sometimes it fails to start) and I dislike Harry's forcing you to have the lap time big on the display - on a track day I don't want to see it as it will upset the organisers - with the Racelogic box it is hidden under the dash and captures the data automatically, so only have to use my gopro remote to start/stop the camera - RaceRender makes syncing the data with video extremely simple.

snortdavis

26 posts

171 months

Friday 23rd September 2016
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I'm running an AIM SOLO DL for data logger, along with a Go Pro -- combine in RaceRender or Dashware, and voila. the AIM splices into the CAN Bus, has GPS and accelerometers, and you can set up the displays to show whatever you want -- i.e. no timing at track days.

Lagerlout

1,810 posts

236 months

Saturday 1st October 2016
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Just reporting back. Have to say pretty disappointed with the Kiwi3+iPhone combo. Been using the track addict app and it has me all over the place, certainly not on the circuit! So firstly it seems the internal GPS is no good for using in this situation. Also, it seemed to disconnect the GoPro and the Kiwi3 randomly.

Think I'm going to have to look at the AIM as above. Any other suggestions? The AIM seems to want to work with their own camera but I really want to keep my 4K GoPro as it produces brilliant quality video.