A dashboard camera contains a video camera to capture the action, a power input which is usually linked to the electrical system of the car and a storage media that is used to save whatever the dashcam records. Ideally, dashboard cameras are designed to record continuously once powered up, without specific controls. Specific controls can be set to instruct it to record when they sense motion or when the car is packed without the intervention of the driver. Specific controls depend on what the user wants the dashcam to do.

Dashboard cameras are important as they help monitor the performance of a driver. This helps the manager decide which driver needs additional training and which driver can be relied on. The benefit, in turn, helps to monitor the use of a vehicle including where it has been. Some dash cams are set in a way that they send what they have captured to a remote location. The owner of a vehicle can thus monitor his vehicle from afar.

Dashcams aid in protecting driver from fraudulent insurance or civil litigation. This feature in a vehicle helps settle disputes that would otherwise cause a driver much, especially if he is the victim in an incident. The recorded videos from the dashcam clearly show what takes place whenever the car is on impact with something, thus clearly showing the one at fault in an incident. This aspect also helps whenever an accident has occurred and no one seems to know what went wrong. A dashcam can also protect your car in case it is stolen. During the process, it will be able to record the activities and people involved in stealing your car thus increasing the probability of finding your car.

There are many advantages of dashboard cameras as they record vital information on the road that may become useful in many situations. Other advantages include recording memories of a road trip, helping parents to ensure their children are safe while lending them their cars and recording unexpected events such as the passing of a meteor, which is difficult to capture otherwise.