I never accept a product for review with the assumption that I won’t be able to use it. Although we have misgivings about Ring and its partnership with law enforcement, I have generally found its products to be easy to use and serve the purpose for which they are intended, which is to help keep you and your family safer.
With that in mind, let me say that Ring’s Car Cam does not fulfill the intended purpose of a dash cam. Cars are preposterously expensive pieces of property we leave sitting around, unattended, outside. I would love to have stored video footage of a hit-and-run that took my car out of commission for a month last year, or to have gotten an alert when someone broke into my car at night while it was parked in my driveway.
Alas, the Car Cam just doesn’t work that way. The first day I had it installed, the Ring app told me the camera had drained my car battery. I flew downstairs in my pajamas and unplugged it at once. A camera that doesn’t help keep your car safe and also renders it unusable isn’t worth having at all.
But first, the installation. The Car Cam itself feels relatively sturdy—it has dual cameras, one front-facing and one rear-facing, mounted on a curving wedge you stick in the space between the dashboard and the windshield. One of the main reasons Ring cameras are so ubiquitous is that installation can be remarkably easy. The first hint that all was not well here was when the company asked me for the make, model, and year of my car.


