The rise of the dash-cam

The most dramatic footage of the meteor came from cameras in cars

February 18, 2013 12:51 am | Updated 12:51 am IST

CRITICAL TOOL: The meteor contrail seen in a frame grab from a dashboard camera. It was taken on a highway from Kostanai, Kazakhstan, to the Chelyabinsk region in Russia. Photo: AP

CRITICAL TOOL: The meteor contrail seen in a frame grab from a dashboard camera. It was taken on a highway from Kostanai, Kazakhstan, to the Chelyabinsk region in Russia. Photo: AP

When fragments of a meteorite rained down on Chelyabinsk and the surrounding area, the most dramatic footage came from not from television news crews, but from cameras perched on car dashboards.

These small devices, known as dashcams, have been marketed around the world but nowhere have they become as popular as in Russia, where they cost around 2,300 roubles. Their original purpose was as an extra precaution against the many dangers lurking on Russian roads: drunk drivers, corrupt traffic police or false allegations of causing a collision.

But a side product has been a series of clips which often go viral on the internet, such as a plane skidding out of control and scattering debris across a nearby motorway, a would-be extortionist cutting up a driver and then braking hard to cause a crash, and a fighter jet buzzing a country road.

Courts have recently begun accepting video clips as evidence, said car journalist Aleksei Zakharov, because they can help determine the speed, position and context of accidents.

Traffic cameras installed across large cities in Russia often turn out not to be working or blocked by snow.

Many bloody accidents are also caught on film and have given rise to ghoulish web communities where the most stomach-turning footage is collected and picked over in discussion forums. — © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2013

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