I left the top down during much of my testing to give you a better idea of just what the v360 can cover. I’d prefer one that sticks to the window, you might not. It’s not meant to adhere to the rear window, but the molding or interior roof. The rear camera comes with a hard mount that you can screw down, or use sticky tape if you’d like a less intrusive solution. Rexing informed me that there is a suction mount available. No horizontal adjustment is possible once it’s installed, so use a level or be careful when you install it. My test unit came with a large semi-permanent mount that the camera slides onto. The installation file for the VeeSee player can also be downloaded from the Rexing site, but that version failed on the two computers I tried it on. It’s placed in a exe folder when you first format a SDHC card (not included). Rexing is rather clever about delivering said VeSeeGo player. You can see in the image above why a special desktop player is required. On the touchscreen, and with the special VeSeeGo video player that’s required to view the 360-degree captures on the desktop, the V360 displays video in several ways: wide (panoramic) ball (with full force fish-eye) split top and bottom showing the front and the rear and quartered, covering all four quadrants. You will not get this kind of coverage with a top or roof in place. Note that this was taken in a convertible with the top down. This is what the 360-degree camera’s output looks like if you don’t use the included (placed on your SDHC card when you format it) VeSeeGo player.
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