garmin dash cam 55 1440p 2.0 lcd screen price

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Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan Republic, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Benin, Bermuda, Bhutan, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Brunei Darussalam, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Cape Verde Islands, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, China, Colombia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Côte d"Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Democratic Republic of the Congo, Denmark, Djibouti, Ecuador, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Fiji, Finland, France, Gabon Republic, Gambia, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Gibraltar, Greece, Greenland, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kiribati, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macau, Macedonia, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Monaco, Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Nauru, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Niger, Nigeria, Niue, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Croatia, Republic of the Congo, Romania, Rwanda, Saint Helena, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Solomon Islands, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Thailand, Togo, Tonga, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Vatican City State, Vietnam, Wallis and Futuna, Western Sahara, Western Samoa, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe

These compact cameras stay out of sight, but they never lose sight of what happens on the road. Just plug them in, and you can hit the road knowing that these cameras are capturing high-quality video. Automatic Incident Detection (G-sensor) saves video footage upon impact, and the cameras are GPS-enabled, so all footage is stamped with location, time, date and speed. You’ll know exactly what happened and have proof.
These trusty dash cameras not only act as your eyewitnesses as you drive, but they also provide advanced driver alerts — such as forward collision and lane departure warnings¹ — to encourage safer driving.
Garmin"s Dash Cam 55 is an easy-to-use super-high-definition drive recorder with 2.0” LCD display. With an outstanding field of view, it captures the entire road and includes GPS for detailed time and location data, pinpointing exactly where and when events happened. Rely on your Dash Cam 55 to capture excellent video detail in both bright and low-light conditions. Mount the camera to your windshield, and record your drive in 1440p. Dash Cam 55 records in a continuous loop, using the included replaceable microSD™ card. To add more memory, add a larger microSD card (accepts up to 64 GB, sold separately; Class 10 required). Play back the footage right on the display or review later on your computer.
No need to worry about starting and stopping. If the Dash Cam 55 is plugged into a powered source, it starts recording automatically and saves footage in case of incidents.
The Dash Cam 55 features automatic Incident Detection (G-Sensor) so when an incident is detected, your camera knows to save the current, last and next recordings, thereby preserving a complete record of the event. And all this information is saved to the included Class 10 replaceable microSD memory card.
Parking mode monitors your car’s surroundings while your car is parked and the engine is not running. It automatically begins recording if and when motion is detected. (Requires Garmin parking mode cable, sold separately; professional installation recommended.)
The Dash Cam 55 from Garmin is a great choice for superb video quality and excellent brand reliability. Physically, it"s one of the smallest dashcams out there (despite the fact that the 55 still manages to include a screen on the back), and from a name like Garmin, you know you"re in good hands. For the basic resolution (1080p) less expensive version of this dashcam, please see the Garmin Dash Cam 45, or for the super-wide angle and voice-controlled version, please see the Garmin Dash Cam 65W.
2) Red light and speed camera warnings are not available in all regions. See Garmin.com for details regarding paid subscriptions for updating this content

Command dash cam with your voice, and keep your hands on the wheel. Say “OK, Garmin” to save video, take a picture, start/stop audio recording and start/stop the Travelapse feature.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 is an easy-to-use high-definition driving recorder with 2.0” LCD display. With an outstanding field of view, it captures the entire road and includes GPS for detailed time and location data, pinpointing exactly where and when events happened. Rely on your Garmin Dash Cam 55 to capture excellent video detail in both bright and low-light conditions. Mount the camera to your windscreen, and record your drive in 1440p. Dash Cam records in a continuous loop, using the included replaceable microSD™card. To add more memory, add a larger microSD card (accepts up to 64 GB, sold separately; Class 10 required). Play back the footage right on the display or review later on your computer.
No need to worry about starting and stopping. If Garmin Dash Cam 55 is plugged into a powered source, it starts recording automatically and saves footage in case of incidents.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 features automatic incident detection (G-Sensor) so when an incident is detected, your camera knows to save the current, last and next recordings, thereby preserving a complete record of the event. And all this information is saved to the included Class 10 replaceable microSD memory card.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 has built-in Wi-Fi®so you can wirelessly sync videos to your compatible smartphone after downloading the free VIRB®App. This makes it easy to share videos with friends, insurance agencies or legal authorities.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 features helpful driver awareness warnings to help encourage safer driving. The forward collision warningalerts if you drive too closely to the car ahead. Lane departure warningsalert you if you stray from your lane. The red light and speed cameras warningalerts you to nearby red light cameras or speed cameras. Get regularly updated red light and speed camera location data with a subscription to the Cyclops™ database, which is maintained daily and contains information about fixed red light and speed cameras. And when your vehicle is stopped at a junction or in traffic, the “Go” alert notifies you when traffic ahead of your vehicle is moving again.
Parking mode monitors your car’s surroundings while your car is parked and the engine is not running. It automatically begins recording if and when motion is detected. (Requires Garmin parking mode cable, sold separately; professional installation recommended.)

Command dash cam with your voice, and keep your hands on the wheel. Say “OK, Garmin” to save video, take a picture, start/stop audio recording and start/stop the Travelapse feature.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 is an easy-to-use high-definition driving recorder with 2.0” LCD display. With an outstanding field of view, it captures the entire road and includes GPS for detailed time and location data, pinpointing exactly where and when events happened. Rely on your Garmin Dash Cam 55 to capture excellent video detail in both bright and low-light conditions. Mount the camera to your windscreen, and record your drive in 1440p. Dash Cam records in a continuous loop, using the included replaceable microSD™ card. To add more memory, add a larger microSD card (accepts up to 64 GB, sold separately; Class 10 required). Play back the footage right on the display or review later on your computer.
No need to worry about starting and stopping. If Garmin Dash Cam 55 is plugged into a powered source, it starts recording automatically and saves footage in case of incidents.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 features automatic incident detection (G-Sensor) so when an incident is detected, your camera knows to save the current, last and next recordings, thereby preserving a complete record of the event. And all this information is saved to the included Class 10 replaceable microSD memory card.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 has built-in Wi-Fi® so you can wirelessly sync videos to your compatible smartphone after downloading the free VIRB® App. This makes it easy to share videos with friends, insurance agencies or legal authorities.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 features helpful driver awareness warnings to help encourage safer driving. The forward collision warning1 alerts if you drive too closely to the car ahead. Lane departure warnings1 alert you if you stray from your lane. The red light and speed cameras warning2 alerts you to nearby red light cameras or speed cameras. Get regularly updated red light and speed camera location data with a subscription to the Cyclops™ database, which is maintained daily and contains information about fixed red light and speed cameras. And when your vehicle is stopped at a junction or in traffic, the “Go” alert notifies you when traffic ahead of your vehicle is moving again.
Parking mode monitors your car’s surroundings while your car is parked and the engine is not running. It automatically begins recording if and when motion is detected. (Requires Garmin parking mode cable, sold separately; professional installation recommended.)

Command dash cam with your voice, and keep your hands on the wheel. Say “OK, Garmin” to save video, take a picture, start/stop audio recording and start/stop the Travelapse feature.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 is an easy-to-use high-definition driving recorder with 2.0” LCD display. With an outstanding field of view, it captures the entire road and includes GPS for detailed time and location data, pinpointing exactly where and when events happened. Rely on your Garmin Dash Cam 55 to capture excellent video detail in both bright and low-light conditions. Mount the camera to your windscreen, and record your drive in 1440p. Dash Cam records in a continuous loop, using the included replaceable microSD™ card. To add more memory, add a larger microSD card (accepts up to 64 GB, sold separately; Class 10 required). Play back the footage right on the display or review later on your computer.
No need to worry about starting and stopping. If Garmin Dash Cam 55 is plugged into a powered source, it starts recording automatically and saves footage in case of incidents.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 features automatic incident detection (G-Sensor) so when an incident is detected, your camera knows to save the current, last and next recordings, thereby preserving a complete record of the event. And all this information is saved to the included Class 10 replaceable microSD memory card.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 has built-in Wi-Fi® so you can wirelessly sync videos to your compatible smartphone after downloading the free VIRB® App. This makes it easy to share videos with friends, insurance agencies or legal authorities.
Garmin Dash Cam 55 features helpful driver awareness warnings to help encourage safer driving. The forward collision warning1 alerts if you drive too closely to the car ahead. Lane departure warnings1 alert you if you stray from your lane. The red light and speed cameras warning2 alerts you to nearby red light cameras or speed cameras. Get regularly updated red light and speed camera location data with a subscription to the Cyclops™ database, which is maintained daily and contains information about fixed red light and speed cameras. And when your vehicle is stopped at a junction or in traffic, the “Go” alert notifies you when traffic ahead of your vehicle is moving again.
Parking mode monitors your car’s surroundings while your car is parked and the engine is not running. It automatically begins recording if and when motion is detected. (Requires Garmin parking mode cable, sold separately; professional installation recommended.)

You have decided on one thing and that’s you want one of the smallest dash cameras on the market in your car, watching the road and unsuspecting danger. The recent Garmin Dash Cams have captured your interest due to their small form factor making the dash cam a discrete addition to your car. But as you are about to send the item to your shopping cart you realize there’s several different types of small dash cams from Garmin and you sigh as at this point you wanted less options to choose from.
There are more similarities than differences between the Garmin Dash Cam 45 vs 55 vs 65, but the differences should sway your opinion one way or the other, especially if you are dead set on the small size.
Let’s compare all the different models and truly see what difference there is and is the extra cost worth it. As we compare and contrast we will be giving each camera a review and showing you why different people might choose a different model.
There are only a few differences between the Garmin 55 vs 65 that are notable. The top difference is that the Garmin 65 has a 180 degree wide angle lens, providing more field of view for the camera. This is the largest wide angle lens I’ve seen on a dash cam. This can provide left to right total coverage ensuring that you’ll get the full picture of your car dash.
In take a look at the footage, with really drastic wide angle lens, you will get bad distortion which will warp the sides of the picture. While there is warping in the Garmin 65’s image, it doesn’t seem too severe and seems like it’ll often be the A-pillar of the vehicle and not something wildly important.
Resolution and frame rate are the other differences. With the Garmin 55, there are a lot more options from 720P to 1440P and various frame rates from 30 FPS to 60 FPS whereas the Garmin 65 only offers 1080P at 30 FPS.
The only reason why you would want to get the Garmin 65 is for the wide angle capabilities. If you feel like other dash cams haven’t offered an adequate coverage for you, then this dash cam might be the perfect solution.
The biggest differences between the Garmin 45 vs 55 are the Video Resolution, Voice Control, the available frames per second and the camera megapixels. On a smaller note, the Garmin 55 does come with a mircoSD card twice the size (8GB) as the Garmin 45.
On the Garmin 45, the only available filming resolutions are at 1080P and 720P at 30 FPS. The Garmin 55 has a plethora of more options. It allows 1440P, 1080P at 60 FPS, 1080P HDR, 1080p at 30 FPS and 720P.
If you couldn’t tell the difference, that’s a lot of different options in the Garmin 55. What I like the most about the additional options is the 60 FPS or frames per second option. Going from 30 FPS to 60 FPS is such a difference in quality and clarity. Everything is buttery smooth which is what you want to see when your are interpreting dash cam footage for an accident or dispute.
The Garmin 45 doesn’t have any voice control options whereas the Garmin 55 does. It includes basic commands such as to save a video, take a picture or pause audio recording. It’s a nice touch to have hands-free options, especially if you have the dash cam mounted in a way that you can’t safely access it.
Directly affecting the video resolution, a camera megapixel refers to literally one million individual pixels. Generally, the higher the megapixels, the more data is stored about an image, thus providing a high quality image.
The Garmin 45 is accompanied with a 2.1 megapixel camera whereas the Garmin 55 has been boosted up to 3.7 megapixels, a more than 50% increase. In the test footage you can see here, there may not be a big difference in the image when it is zoomed out, but zooming in would reveal a lot of disparities among details.
If you’re looking for a small dash cam, don’t look past the Garmin Dash Cam lineup. Garmin has really pushed the limit of what a tiny dash cam is as they measure just over 1.5 inches tall. If you don’t want to see any part of the dash cam in your car, or feel like it would be discrete from outside lookers, the Garmin Dash Cams are your answer.
The Garmin 45 is the cheapest out of the available options and still has a lot of the mandatory core features. Loop recording, G-Sensor, WiFi and GPS are all standard features of the Garmin 45. It also comes with a screen!
It’s pretty neat Garmin decided to go with the WiFi connectivity as well as the screen. I guess they felt they couldn’t go any smaller, so if a screen fit, might as well have it there!
One thing about the Garmin that I think is very underrated and not said enough is that there’s an internal battery that is included that runs about 30 minutes without power from the vehicle. What this means is that if you get in a bad accident where you car might shut off, your Garmin dash cam will still continue recording. This is so useful! Sometimes bad accidents happen and for whatever reason, power might not be supplied to your dash cam. If you don’t notice, any potential footage is never recorded.
In terms of software, Garmin really packs in a bunch of driver assistance features into one dash cam. Lane departure, forward collision, red light and speed camera warnings are all standard. The Garmin will alert you when it detects any of these situations unfolding.
Overall the Garmin 45 is a good choice for most drivers. We did find some of the driver assistance features to be a little bit overbearing which is understandable, so we turned those off and allowed the dash cam to do its main job recording.
Next up is the Garmin 55 Dash Cam. Maintaining the same form factor as the Garmin 45, the Garmin 55 increased its megapixel count from 2.1 to 3.7 megapixels. They also decided to put in a ton of different resolutions and frame rates to match people’s different preferences.
If you don’t speak English or don’t prefer it, then these voice controls will be useless for you as English is the only supported voice controls language. The dash cam itself can be used in different languages.
Some reviewers have expressed concern over the overheating on some dash cameras. This could be due to the intense load the camera is put under when filming at a demanding video resolution and frame rate. Several firmware updates should address this concern.
The Garmin 65 Dash Cam is one of the last devices in Garmin’s lineup. And to be honest, there isn’t much of a difference between the Garmin 55 vs Garmin 65. The only thing is that the Garmin 65 has a 180 degree wide angle, which is huge! People who need a wide angle lens are for those who have really wide car dashboards or windshields and for those who want full road coverage.
The Garmin 65 dials back what it did in the Garmin 55 and actually reduces the number of resolution and frame rates a user has access to. Now, the 65 only offers 1080P at 30 FPS. We think this is better if there are any overheating battery issues. When we talked to Garmin, they mentioned that the operating temperature of the device was from 30 degrees to 130 degrees Fahrenheit which is pretty poor compared to the industry standard of around 150 degrees.
Those who don’t speak English and couldn’t utilize the Voice Commands should now be rejoicing as Garmin has implemented several other popular languages such as French, Italian and German. Where’s the Spanish?!
The last thing I wanted to chat about was the magnetic mount that comes with all Garmin Dash Cams. This is something you don’t see in the dash cam world. Since it is so light, all you have to do is install a magnetic mount anywhere on your windshield. We recommend out of the way behind the rear view mirror. This is because a magnetic piece will stay on your windshield but still allow you to remove the entire dash cam.
This is especially useful if you don’t want to keep your dash cam visible to others. It’s as simple as disconnecting the power and taking it off the magnetic mount.

The Garmin Dash Cam 55 is my fifth dashcam. Previously I had two Blackvues (poor performers), a Vantrue X1 (fine, but I didn"t like the mount), and a Goluk T2 (died after about a year). I was attracted to the Garmin because of its small size, clever mount, good visual performance and built-in GPS (many other dashcams require some sort of external GPS module.) I also had high hopes for it based on initial reports of excellent customer service from Garmin (I have previously owned Garmin GPS units and also found support to be good.) Now that I"ve lived with the 55 for a week or so, I find it is very good, but has some issues I consider serious.The Garmin dashcams are tiny, solidly built rectangles with a 2-inch LCD screen on the rear, four buttons on the right, and a lens that protrudes from the front. (An advantage of the protrusion is that the lens is closer to the windshield, which reduces reflections from the dash.) The lens on the 55 is decorated with a copper-colored ring that is attractive, but I would have preferred all black here.The left side has a MicroUSB port which is where the power cable connects. The cable has a blocky right-angle connector which is easy to attach and remove. In use, the wire runs straight up, where you may have tucked it into the headliner (as I did). The mount is unusual - a small metal disk about the size of a US quarter sticks onto the windshield. The small ball-joint mount magnetically attaches to the disk, with the ball snapping into the top of the dashcam. I found the mount to be secure and it was easy to adjust the position of the cam.Garmin supplies a long power cable with a 12V "lighter socket" plug on the end. You can optionally buy Garmin"s dedicated parking cable for hard-wiring into your car"s power. Recording while parked is possible only if you have this cable, which I do. (While you could use one of the generic "battery saver" devices, the Garmin won"t switch into a parking mode if you do this.)When you power on the Dash Cam 55, it first displays a warning message about not using it while driving. You can dismiss this by pressing the top button, or just wait 5-10 seconds. Note that if you press the bottom button during this message, it takes you to the setup screens. Then, if you have parking mode enabled, it beeps and displays for another 5-10 seconds how many parking videos were recorded. This feature was added in the 3.50 firmware update, and you can"t disable it. I hate it. After that, you see a live view with a plus in a circle at the center. This remains on for a minute, after which it tells you the screen will turn off and it does. (You can set it to not turn the screen off.) The live view is somewhat obscured by translucent information bars at top and bottom. The top bar has indicators for GPS signal level and internal battery level. If the display is off you can turn it on again by pressing the top button. Pressing and holding that button will initiate power off.When not powered with a cable, you can manually turn on the dashcam as it has an internal battery that is said to last for about 30 minutes. This could be handy if you have an incident where you want to take the dashcam out and record around your car. While recording, a red LED at the lower left is illuminated. If in parking mode, this LED pulses on and off.Recordings while driving have superimposed at the bottom the date, time, GPS coordinates and speed; you can select to not show the speed or coordinates. You can select among several resolutions and frame rates - I chose the 1080p 30fps with HDR (High Dynamic Range). There is a 1440p 30fps mode, as well as 1080p 60fps, but these take more storage space. I find the video quality to be very good, but not quite as good as I would have expected from the claimed resolution. It"s good enough for my purposes. The field of view is wide and encompasses my entire windshield. Garmin sells a model 65W with an even wider view, but I can"t see the point of that.The 55 includes several "driver assistance" features. Forward Collision Warning alerts you if it thinks you"re approaching something in front of you too fast (enabled at 30MPH or faster), but I found it tended to alert when someone changed lanes in front of me or if I was passing a line of stopped cars. Lane Departure Warning beeps if it thinks you"re straying out of your lane, but it kept sounding off for no apparent reason. Then there is Go Alert that tells you if it sees traffic in front of you starting to move, but it too was very prone to false alarms. I eventually turned all of these off. The dashcam also has a database of red light and speed cameras and can alert you when you approach one. There are none in my area so I couldn"t test this. You can purchase a subscription to database updates, which you must install with the dashcam connected to a computer.An interesting feature is voice command. You say "OK Garmin", it beeps, then you say a command such as "Take a picture" or "Save video". This works, but also tends to trigger randomly when it hears something on the radio. You can turn this off if you want. Another feature is "Travelapse", which you have to explicitly turn on and off (you can do it with voice). This records a sped-up view of your trip. It feels like a gimmick to me, as the video quality isn"t good enough for a "travel movie", but it could be fun for some.Because the 55 has an LCD screen, you can play back recordings right on the unit. The middle two buttons are up-down for selecting options, the bottom button confirms the selection and the top goes back. To view recordings, select Gallery and you can then see the different kinds of recordings, with parking mode recordings separate from driving mode recordings, which it calls "Unsaved". And herein lies my first major complaint. Like most dashcams, the recordings while driving overwrite the oldest when the storage is full, but the parking mode recordings do not. If you have the parking cable, the storage will quickly fill up with many gigabytes of parking videos and they won"t go away until you explicitly delete them. This means less and less space for driving videos unless you stay on top of this. You can adjust the time during which it will record videos while parked - the lowest is two hours.Every other dashcam I have used follows one of two strategies for parking recordings. Either they are combined with regular recordings and recycled as needed, or there is a fixed space for parking recordings that is separate but it also cycles - not the Garmin. In just two days I accumulated more than 13GB of parking recordings that I had no interest in. On the dashcam itself you can delete individual recordings, or if you scroll to the bottom of the list (annoying if there"s a lot of them), there"s a Delete All choice. It"s easiest when the dashcam is connected to a computer, but you can also do it with the Garmin VIRB app for iOS and Android phones. Note that the Garmin does what is called "buffered" recording in parking mode. If it detects motion, it stores 30 seconds prior and continues while motion is detected, otherwise it doesn"t save video with no motion. But in my experience, other than being parked in a garage, there will be almost continuous motion.Ah, the VIRB app. The words I want to use for this would get me in trouble here, so I"ll just say that it will cause you endless frustration if you try to use it to view recordings. To start, you have to go into the Gallery on the dashcam and select Share Gallery. Then it turns on its WiFi radio which you connect to on your phone. The VIRB app will then show you thumbnails of all your non-driving-mode videos - or it will if you have patience while the thumbnails are filled in. Each one has a date, time and duration shown, but the times were uniformly wrong for me. At first it seemed it was just not taking DST into account, as some times were an hour off, but as I went on, I found the times off by random amounts.At the bottom of the display of all the non-driving videos, there is an "Unsaved Videos" button which takes you to the driving videos. Again you get thumbnails with wrong times. It takes a while for these to fill in. For any of the videos, you can tap on it and select Play, but in my experience this generally caused a spinning circle to be displayed and nothing else. When a recording did actually start playing, it would play a few frames, stop, then play a few more. Ok, how about downloading to the phone? Each driving mode recording is one minute, parking videos are three minutes. When I tried to do a download, the app told me it would be more than four hours to completion. As a point of comparison, the Goluk T2 (when it worked), downloaded a three-minute 1080p video in about 20 seconds.So what CAN you do with the app? You can delete recordings easily enough, and can also check/update the dashcam"s firmware. But you can do both of these much easier by connecting the dashcam to a computer by USB. (You use the Garmin Express app to update firmware or red light camera data. This is also the only way to register your purchase with Garmin.)Unlike some other dashcams, Garmin doesn"t provide a supported way to extract the GPS data from the videos so that you can map your drive. The data IS there, and clever users have figured out how to use a different, unsupported Garmin program to get it, but it is an arduous process. Garmin really needs to do better here.The Garmin Dash Cam 55 combines very good hardware with not-so-good software. It is my hope that if enough people complain to Garmin about things such as the parking videos filling up the storage, they might address those in a future update. Garmin does seem to be updating the firmware often, so I"ll keep my fingers crossed. (I have communicated my concerns to Garmin.)Note: Amazon no longer notifies reviewers when a question or comment has been added, so if you add a question for me and I don"t respond in a few days, you can contact me through my profile.Edit: June 23, 2018I wanted to note that Garmin now offers a suction mount and a polarizing filter for the 45 and 55 models through their web site. These aren"t being sold on Amazon at the time I write this, and the filter isn"t even linked from the 55"s product page. The Garmin part numbers are 010-12530-05 and 010-12530-18; enter these in the Search box on the Garmin site. The suction mount is handy if you want to use the dashcam in a rental car, and a polarizing filter can help suppress glare and reflections.There haven"t been any firmware updates since I wrote the original review, but other than the need to periodically clear out parking videos, it has been problem-free for me. I also found a freeware program called "RegistratorViewer" that makes it easier to view recordings on a Windows computer, though the software"s mapping feature doesn"t recognize the GPS data in the Garmin files. If you try this, look for instructions on how to fix an error with its use of the Google Maps API.
Ms.Josey
Ms.Josey