Skip to main content

Waylens Horizon review

Waylens' Horizons is a dash cam on steroids, but its mount can't pass muster

Waylens Horizon review
Nolan Browning/Digital Trends
Waylens Horizon
MSRP $499.99
“The Waylens camera shows great promise, but its mount doesn't deliver.”
Pros
  • Great quality in most conditions
  • Fantastic user interface for camera and mobile app
  • Easy to share and edit video
Cons
  • Low quality camera mount
  • Lens halo effect in sunlight

The Waylens Horizon camera made automotive enthusiasts run to their keyboards to contribute to its Kickstarter campaign in October 2015. The basic idea was a dash camera on steroids that can record your driving and display stats like G-forces, speed, engine rpm, boost pressure, and much more. What more could you want?

Recommended Videos

The campaign flew past the $55,000 goal to reach an astounding $606,662 in total donations. But can this camera system live up to the incredible hype? Or will you need to find a better way to show off your automotive exploits?

In the box

To make this system work, several components act in tandem. In the box you will find the Waylens Horizon cone-shaped camera, finished in a darker gray metal. On the smaller side of the cone, you find the camera lens with f/2.4 aperture and 157-degree view range. On the opposing side is a beautiful OLED display screen. The camera comes with one automotive mount for the windshield and a second USB adapter mount for viewing the footage on your PC. To grab all the vehicle data from the car, you get an OBD-II transmitter, which is compact and has a white LED to let you know it is powered on when plugged in.

The kit comes with a remote control with a rubber strap to fasten it to your steering wheel. This remote allows you to “star” or save a specific clip so that the camera does not overwrite that particular portion of video. To keep it all connected, the kit includes one 13-foot USB cable to power the device in the car and another 4-foot cable for PC connectivity.

Hitting the trail

The mount attaches to the windshield with the use of a adhesive suction cup. Then the Waylens Horizon camera connects to it by a locking mechanism that is rotated to keep it both steady and in place. We had issues with movement in the mount and found that the locking mechanism still gave far too much play, allowing vibrations and noises to show up on the video. The suction portion of the mount also began to come unattached after mounting and removing the system from a few different vehicles during testing. This may have been a rare case, but these are simple issues you wouldn’t expect from a $450 device. Also, the system requires a MicroSD card that is not included before you set off. If you purchase your own card, be sure to keep it under the 128GB limit.

One of the primary uses Waylens shows in its videos is capturing a vehicle off-road. We tested the system in the 2017 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trailhawk at a local drive event to highlight “Pitch and Roll” data from the camera. We quickly learned for this first trip that even with the OBD-II transmitter connected and paired through Bluetooth, the system will not show data if the device is not plugged in. When plugged in, pairing both the OBD-II and remote is as simple as swiping up on the OLED display and quickly accessing Bluetooth setting. Even without data from the ODB-II the Waylens Horizon can display the G-forces and items like Pitch and Roll for times when you want to go on battery alone.

The camera shows great promise but doesn’t deliver with this initial offering.

On our drive in the Jeep the battery lasted well over 30 minutes and matched the battery life of most dash cameras we have tested. In footage we captured, the system display gives a good idea of the angle and forces acting upon the Jeep while off-road. The default view on the OLED screen shows the video footage but swiping right to left will cycle through various gauges. It was nice to have the pitch and roll up while driving to see real time data, in addition to the recording. It’s something off-roaders will really appreciate. The video itself was clear — the camera can record at 1080p and 60fps — but when filming in high sunlight, the lens creates a halo effect that we have not seen on other dash cameras.

On the road

For our second test, we hit some backroads with the Fiat 500 Abarth Cabrio to see performance data like the Boost, rpm, and G-force gauges. With the mount plugged into the 12V power source and the OBD-II transmitter connected, you will get a visual indication on the Waylens camera when the transmitter connects via Bluetooth. In the video clips, you can see the stunning video quality and various gauges can be shown or hidden on the video output via the mobile application or desktop client.

At speed, the vibration in our footage was quite noticeable. Your  experience may vary, but we had continued issues with the suction mount and locking ring. At times we felt it locked in and was steady but for most of our drive up the canyons, the Waylens mount pivoted more than you would get from a standard dash camera or action camera like a GoPro. The remote was handy for saving the best clips from our drive. A visual “Star” indicator appears on the Waylens OLED display when a clip is saved. The only downside to saving a clip is that the audio of a camera shutter that indicates to the driver that a clip was saved is included in the footage, and can be distracting if you are trying to capture audio on your drive clip.

Share at home or on the go

The Waylens Horizon can connect to a fantastic mobile application to control the camera and share footage. The application is available for Android and iOS and is simple to set up as you simply connect to the Waylens Wi-Fi connection and the camera view will display on your device. From the main screen you can view the camera footage and start/stop the recording and even “star” to save the current clip. The Waylens system has two different formats for the vehicle data and you can switch between different formats or decide to only show certain gauges at different sizes on a particular clip.

With the Waylens application, you can also view footage you just captured and even share it directly to YouTube or Facebook. The Waylens application even has its own feed to view shared footage and post your latest clips. When sharing your video it will allow you to tag location and even pull the vehicle information from the OBDII for you to share that info with the Waylens community. Within the application, you can even edit the length of the clip, add music over your clip, or add in additional clips to extend your video. This level of editing and sharing capabilities within a mobile app is fantastic and not seen in any other dash camera or action camera applications.

There is also a desktop application with some additional features for both PC and Apple. The Waylens system has a dock for plugging the system in via USB to your computer and the clips appear within the desktop client. The desktop application has similar features to the mobile app but allows things like exporting the video to your PC in mp4 format to share or distribute however you like. The MicroSD card itself has video clips without the data overlay and the mobile and desktop clients are the only way to modify how that vehicle data is displayed on your clips before you export them.

Our Take

In the end, the Waylens Horizon is an amazing concept that delivers on most of the features it originally claimed. The biggest fault that truly kills a tremendous product is the lack of quality from the mounting solution that they chose to include. With slight updates, like the one currently in beta that displays performance specs, and a more rigid mount, the camera could be a winner.

Is there a better alternative?

The best thing that the Waylens Horizon has going for it at the moment is that there simply is no other alternative for what the camera offers. The data overlay on the video is unique and you won’t find it anywhere else.

How long will it last?

With successful Kickstarter campaigns, there are always copycats but Waylens is the first out the gate and with frequent updates the system will certainly be the product to beat.

Should you buy it?

No. There is a lot to like in this first version, but ultimately, it falls flat in some major areas. The UI and experience is great and with slight tweaks, the product will be a must have for any automotive enthusiasts. But at the moment, we would hold out until there’s a better mounting system.

Nolan Browning
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Nolan grew up in a space balanced between the glitz and glamour of Los Angeles' high-gloss exotics and the Mojave desert's…
Rivian set to unlock unmapped roads for Gen2 vehicles
rivian unmapped roads gen2 r1t gallery image 0

Rivian fans rejoice! Just a few weeks ago, Rivian rolled out automated, hands-off driving for its second-gen R1 vehicles with a game-changing software update. Yet, the new feature, which is only operational on mapped highways, had left many fans craving for more.
Now the company, which prides itself on listening to - and delivering on - what its customers want, didn’t wait long to signal a ‘map-free’ upgrade will be available later this year.
“One feedback we’ve heard loud and clear is that customers love [Highway Assist] but they want to use it in more places,” James Philbin, Rivian VP of autonomy, said on the podcast RivianTrackr Hangouts. “So that’s something kind of exciting we’re working on, we’re calling it internally ‘Map Free’, that we’re targeting for later this year.”
The lag between the release of Highway Assist (HWA) and Map Free automated driving gives time for the fleet of Rivian vehicles to gather ‘unique events’. These events are used to train Rivian’s offline model in the cloud before data is distilled back to individual vehicles.
As Rivian founder and CEO RJ Scaringe explained in early March, HWA marked the very beginning of an expanding automated-driving feature set, “going from highways to surface roads, to turn-by-turn.”
For now, HWA still requires drivers to keep their eyes on the road. The system will send alerts if you drift too long without paying attention. But stay tuned—eyes-off driving is set for 2026.
It’s also part of what Rivian calls its “Giving you your time back” philosophy, the first of three pillars supporting Rivian’s vision over the next three to five years. Philbin says that philosophy is focused on “meeting drivers where they are”, as opposed to chasing full automation in the way other automakers, such as Tesla’s robotaxi, might be doing.
“We recognize a lot of people buy Rivians to go on these adventures, to have these amazing trips. They want to drive, and we want to let them drive,” Philbin says. “But there’s a lot of other driving that’s very monotonous, very boring, like on the highway. There, giving you your time back is how we can give the best experience.”
This will also eventually lead to the third pillar of Rivian’s vision, which is delivering Level 4, or high-automation vehicles: Those will offer features such as auto park or auto valet, where you can get out of your Rivian at the office, or at the airport, and it goes off and parks itself.
While not promising anything, Philbin says he believes the current Gen 2 hardware and platforms should be able to support these upcoming features.
The second pillar for Rivian is its focus on active safety features, as the EV-maker rewrote its entire autonomous vehicle (AV) system for its Gen2 models. This focus allowed Rivian’s R1T to be the only large truck in North America to get a Top Safety Pick+ from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
“I believe there’s a lot of innovation in the active safety space, in terms of making those features more capable and preventing more accidents,” Philbin says. “Really the goal, the north star goal, would be to have Rivian be one of the safest vehicles on the road, not only for the occupants but also for other road users.”

Read more
Jaguar Land Rover, Nissan hit the brake on shipments to U.S. over tariffs
Range Rover Sport P400e

Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has announced it will pause shipments of its UK-made cars to the United States this month, while it figures out how to respond to President Donald Trump's 25% tariff on imported cars.

"As we work to address the new trading terms with our business partners, we are taking some short-term actions, including a shipment pause in April, as we develop our mid- to longer-term plans," JLR said in a statement sent to various media.

Read more
Toyota shifts gears: 15 New EVs and a million cars by 2027
Front three quarter view of the 2023 Toyota bZ4X.

After years of cautiously navigating the electric vehicle (EV) market, Toyota is finally ramping up its commitment to fully electric vehicles.
The Japanese automaker, which has long relied on hybrids, is now planning to develop about 15 fully electric models by 2027, up from five currently. These models will include vehicles under the Toyota and Lexus brands, with production expected to reach 1 million units annually by that year, according to a report from Nikkei.
This strategy marks a significant shift for Toyota, which has thus far remained conservative in its approach to electric cars. The company sold just 140,000 EVs globally in 2024—representing less than 2% of its total global sales. Despite this, Toyota is aiming for a much larger presence in the EV market, targeting approximately 35% of its global production to be electric by the end of the decade.
The Nikkei report suggests the company plans to diversify its production footprint beyond Japan and China and expanding into the U.S., Thailand, and Argentina. This would help mitigate the impact of President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on all car imports, as well as reduce delivery times. Toyota is also building a battery plant in North Carolina.
For now, Toyota has only two fully electric vehicles on the U.S. market: The bZ4X  and the Lexus RZ models. The Japanese automaker is expected to introduce new models like the bZ5X and a potential electric version of the popular Tacoma pickup.
Separately, Toyota and Honda, along with South Korea’s Hyundai, all announced on April 4 that they would not be raising prices, at least over the next couple of months, following the imposition of U.S. tariffs. According to a separate Nikkei report, Toyota’s North American division has told its suppliers that it will absorb the extra costs of parts imported from Mexico and Canada. Another 25% for automotive parts imported to the U.S. is slated to come into effect on May 3.

Read more