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Prices may varyThis product ranks #20 of 29 in Dash Cam.Three above it ↓
Last reviewed June 22, 2026
TL;DR The one motorcycle cam in the catalog. Daytime plate legibility unconfirmed, no independent community footage comparison found at time of review; Rexing specs 1080p front + rear through an F1.6 7-element glass lens. Night vision: independent footage comparison not available at time of review (the F1.6 aperture implies reasonable low-light, but no community footage confirms it). The cameras are IP67 water resistant and dustproof for exposed motorcycle mounting. Parking mode is not marketed for this model; the unit is hardwired to the bike for ride recording. No battery or supercapacitor is documented by the manufacturer. FCC assumed; no UL/ETL electrical safety certification confirmed.
The MTC1 is a 2-channel motorcycle cam, not a car windshield cam, and that distinction drives everything about it. It records 1080p at the front and 1080p at the rear through an F1.6 7-element glass lens with a 170-degree view, and the cameras carry an IP67 water-resistant and dustproof rating so they can ride exposed on the fairing or frame in rain and grit. A separate 3-inch LCD controller and an included remote handle operation, useful with gloves on. No independent community footage comparison confirming daytime plate legibility or the night-vision result was available at time of review, so those are manufacturer claims, not corroborated results. The unit is hardwired to the motorcycle's electrical system with the included kit; Rexing documents no battery or supercapacitor, so the hot-storage battery worry that dogs car cams does not have a confirmed source either way. A G-sensor locks footage on impact, a GPS logger stamps location and speed, and storage tops out at 64GB with loop recording.
Best match for a rider who wants weatherproof front-plus-rear coverage on a motorcycle in one kit, with the hardwire cable, GPS logger, and a glove-friendly remote included and IP67 cameras built to live outside. There is very little two-channel weatherproof competition in this niche. Skip it if footage sharpness is the priority: at 1080p it sits below the 4K windshield cams in the Rexing line, and no independent community footage validates its real-world plate legibility yet. A car owner should choose a windshield dash cam instead.
No PPE is required for installation or normal use. The manufacturer documents no lithium battery for the MTC1, which is hardwired to the motorcycle, so there is no confirmed battery-disposal concern. The device qualifies for standard e-waste drop-off (Best Buy, Call2Recycle); no manufacturer take-back program is documented. No independent UL or ETL electrical safety certification was located for the MTC1; FCC radio-emissions compliance is assumed for a US-market wireless device. No California Prop 65 warning is documented on the manufacturer listing.
Motorcycles. The MTC1 is a purpose-built motorcycle cam, the one non-car vehicle cam in our catalog. The cameras are IP67 water resistant and dustproof so they can sit exposed on a bike's fairing or frame, and the unit is operated by a separate 3-inch LCD controller with a remote rather than a windshield-mounted screen. A car owner wants one of the windshield dash cams in the line instead.
The cameras are rated IP67 water resistant and dustproof, which Rexing describes as protection in rainy or dusty riding conditions. IP67 means the cameras tolerate dust and short water immersion, which is the headline feature for a device mounted out in the weather rather than behind a windshield. The 3-inch controller and wiring still want a sensible mounting spot, but the camera bodies are built for exposure.
Yes. The MTC1 is a 2-channel system recording 1080p at the front and 1080p at the rear, both through an F1.6 7-element glass lens with a 170-degree wide angle. Footage is Full HD, not 4K. It supports loop recording and includes a G-sensor that locks footage on impact, plus a built-in GPS logger that stamps location and speed.
The MTC1 ships with a hardwire kit cable and is powered from the motorcycle's electrical system. The manufacturer does not document a built-in battery or a supercapacitor for this model, so we score it without crediting a supercapacitor and without penalizing a lithium battery, since neither is confirmed. The included GPS logger, installation set, and a glove-friendly remote controller round out the box.
Rexing specs 1080p front and rear with an F1.6 7-element glass lens, which implies reasonable detail and low-light gathering for the resolution. No independent community footage comparison confirming the MTC1's real-world daytime plate legibility or night-vision result was available at time of review, so the footage signal is based on the specification, not on corroborated footage. Buyers wanting the sharpest possible video should look at the 4K cams in the line.
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