Categories: The Verge

Rove’s R2-4K dash cam is an extra set of eyes on the road and $48 off at Amazon

Getting into a car accident, even a fender bender, is stressful on its own, but then comes the argument about who was at fault. A dash cam can give you reliable proof of what happened, and Rove’s

Sponsored
R2-4K is currently on sale for $71.99 ($48 off), an all-time low price at Amazon, and $89.99 ($30 off) from Rove. I tested a previous-generation Rove dash cam, and was happy with the quality of its recordings and ease of use. The R2-4K is a significant improvement, capturing higher-quality video and improving the process of getting it onto your phone.

Table of Contents

Toggle

Rove R2-4K

Rove’s R2-4K is a dash cam that can record 4K video, automatically create a clip if it detects an impact, and tag clips with information about your driving speed, location, the time, and date.

Where to Buy:

The dash cam can record 4K video at 30 frames per second or 1080p at 60fps, and captures a 150-degree field of view, so you’ll get a clear image of what happened in front of you and some of what happened directly to your right and left. Its recordings are tagged with the date, time, location, and your driving speed; they’re stored on a microSD card, which you need to purchase separately. You can view video clips on the R2-4K’s 2.4-inch display, or transfer them to your smartphone over Wi-Fi using Rove’s app.

The R2-4K comes with a suction mount and 3M sticky mount, both of which can be installed anywhere on your windshield. The suction mount is easier to move, so we recommend using it to find the dash cam’s permanent place before you decide whether to switch to the sticky mount. The dash cam needs to be connected to its power adapter with a USB-C cable (two are included), so make sure to mount it in an area where the cable won’t dangle and distract you.

Under normal circumstances, the R2-4K will take a continuous time lapse recording and overwrite older footage once the microSD card is filled. However, you can push an “Emergency Lock” button to preserve a specific clip. The dash cam’s built-in G-Sensor will detect an impact and automatically lock that section of video. If the dash cam stops recording, it’ll announce that so you can see what’s wrong. Hopefully you’ll never have to use Rove’s R2-4K for anything important, but it’s handy to have just in case.

Sponsored

rssfeeds-admin

Share
Published by
rssfeeds-admin

Recent Posts

Hoppers Review

Hoppers is in theaters now.It’s not exactly a new observation to say that Pixar’s once…

8 minutes ago

OpenAI Launches GPT-5.4 With Advanced Reasoning, Coding, and Computer-Use Capabilities

OpenAI on March 5, 2026, released GPT-5.4, its most capable and efficient frontier model to…

2 hours ago

PoC Exploit Released Cisco SD-WAN 0-Day Vulnerability Exploited in the Wild

A public proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit has been released for CVE-2026-20127, a maximum-severity zero-day vulnerability in Cisco…

2 hours ago

Winnebago County awards $1.6 million to support mental health services

ROCKFORD, Ill. (WTVO) — The Winnebago County Mental Health Board awarded over $1.6 million in…

2 hours ago

The Pitt Season 2, Episode 9: “3:00 PM” Review

Warning: This review contains full spoilers for The Pitt Season 2, Episode 9!Considering that The…

3 hours ago

Amazon.com says things are fixed after some issues with logging in and checking out

If you were having issues shopping on Amazon or loading your playlists on Amazon Music…

4 hours ago

This website uses cookies.