Yes, less than most suction cups, and not very visible, but putting my cursor on one of the spots on the windscreen, there is more than enough movement for motion blur (camera shake) to blur the pixels.bit of movement there but not a lot, probably less than you would get with a typical suction mounted camera
It would certainly help more than hurt. The only issue I see with that would be if it were necessary to adjust the mirror - having 2 mounting points would make the mirror and camera both kind of 'unmovable objects'.Because of how the camera hangs right below the mirror cover, I could actually put a small square of hook and loop or VHB on the bottom of that cover and raise the camera a couple of mm to attach to it. It would be there to hold the weight of the camera, but only to stabilize it. I wonder if it will make a difference.
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It would certainly help more than hurt. The only issue I see with that would be if it were necessary to adjust the mirror - having 2 mounting points would make the mirror and camera both kind of 'unmovable objects'.
curious, couldnt you just mount the camera to this area, and eliminate the ball joint thingy all together?Because of how the camera hangs right below the mirror cover, I could actually put a small square of hook and loop or VHB on the bottom of that cover and raise the camera a couple of mm to attach to it. It would be there to hold the weight of the camera, but only to stabilize it. I wonder if it will make a difference.
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Not really... It's just a plastic cover that isn't nearly as stable as the rearview mirror itself. It's just a clamshell that snaps over the actual hardware. I think it would allow way too much movement if it was the only source of connection.curious, couldnt you just mount the camera to this area, and eliminate the ball joint thingy all together?
Once my mirror is set, I rarely touch it again, unless I make a major seat adjustment. That is why I was thinking velcro so I can just separate, make any adjustments and then push it back into place.