In bright light, it does a good job at capturing plates of cars going past quickly @1080p 60fps, but of course cars coming from the other direction on the other side of the road are passing faster (15.5mph plus about 30 or whatever) and are also at the edges of the cheap lens, which are usually sharper in the middle - I can still capture those plates if I export a frame when they're further away and enlarge, provided light is good and I have underexposed, as I usually do now (blown out highlights are impossible to enhance when there's low dynamic range, and my camera is high in low dynamic range). The plates of cars passing quickly and close on my side of the road are more legible when they are further away and in the sharper mid view of my cheap lens: export/snap a frame in (free) VLC video player, enlarge and enhance in (free) GIMP. It's easy to pause and advance frame by frame in VLC, to export the sharp ones. At 60 frames per second, there are usually several sharp plate views. With VLC, one can record the playing video and/or audio streams as a file - snip videos shorter, to preserve those treasured horrific memories.