eswimm
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2024
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 557
- Reaction score
- 999
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
- Vehicles
- Model Y, Cybertruck
Assuming you have a properly formatted USB drive installed, your car is always recording a 1 hour loop of video. You either honk the horn, use a voice command or tap the dash cam icon and it saves the prior 10 minutes to the event folder. If you are in an accident with sufficient force, it will automatically save a clip. Reasonable assumption the driver honked at the pedestrian to save that clip, incredibly unlikely that anything saved it automatically, since there was no impact.You see all these comments on here and none will address the serious questions about important things that we can learn from, and this post has brought to light. like how exactly he captured this video while some of us don't have any videos when actually driving. and some don't understand how a certain event was not captured or even recognized as a near collision.
Near collisions and "interesting" events aren't saved, but if you act quickly (i.e. within the hour loop), you can find the event in the recent clips folder and save it manually.
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