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On-Road · Dash Cam Review

Rexing V1P
Dual Channel

After 1,400 miles of mixed highway and city driving, the V1P remains the dual-channel dash cam to beat under $200. Here's the full field report.

Updated May 2026 9 min read
9.2/ 10
The Eye Score
Rexing V1P dash cam

The Verdict

The Rexing V1P earns a 9.2 Eye Score by doing the unglamorous work brilliantly: it boots fast, captures clean 1080p front and rear, and produces footage that holds up as evidence. It is not the flashiest unit on the market, but for the dual-channel category at this price, it is the one we tell friends to buy.

In the Field

Mounted behind the rear-view, the V1P disappears visually. The 2.4" LCD is just large enough for live framing, and the discreet form factor avoids the "windshield clutter" that bigger units invite. Loop recording behaved flawlessly across a full month of daily commutes — no missed segments, no card corruption.

Pros

  • Crisp 1080p front + rear
  • Rock-solid loop recording
  • Discreet windshield footprint
  • Excellent value for dual-channel
  • Reliable G-sensor incident lock

Cons

  • No built-in WiFi
  • Hardwire kit sold separately
  • Night plate-read at distance softens

Night Performance

Under streetlit conditions the V1P resolves plates cleanly out to about three car lengths. On unlit rural roads, that drops to roughly one to two lengths — typical for the sensor class. The WDR implementation is conservative, which preserves detail in the highlights where blown-out headlights would otherwise erase critical context.