GoPro mounting advice for a newbie videographerist

So… I’d been thinking about getting one for ages, but my awesome offspring have chipped in and bought me a used GoPro Hero 7 black for my birthday. I know it’s a couple of iterations off the new spec, but it has the image stabilisation and seems, based on my limited playing about with it to take excellent videos.

Main use will be filming outdoor stuff, especially mountain biking, hill walking and motorcycling. I don’t want to bore the tits off everyone as another rubbish wannabe youtuber, so this will primarily be for my own interest and maybe to share with mates who come out with me.

Loads to learn regarding editing etc, but my main question for you fine people, is how should I mount it to my bike? On my mtb I’ll probably use a chest mount as I think that POV is a good compromise, but not sure on the motorbike. Off on a Scotland tour in a couple of months with the missus on pillion and would like to practice a bit before then on shorter rides to get competent ish at filming. Handlebar mount or helmet mount? I don’t want to throw a load of cash at this - so budget friendly suggestions appreciated.

My Tiger GT Pro actually has GoPro integration so you can switch it off and on and take still images etc via bluetooth using the bikes switchgear. Dunno how well it works yet though.

I see it’s been a while since you’ve posted, but I just wanted to ask if anyone ended up switching bikes or trying different suspension setups after the feedback here. Curious whether anyone’s found a better balance between performance and comfort, especially for longer road rides. Did anyone experiment with alternative springs or just dial in preload/settings?

I’ve tried a few over the years, but for day trips and short tours I keep going back to the best 360 camera for ease of use and image quality. It’s been reliable in all sorts of weather and deals well with vibration, even on my naked bike. Battery life’s decent too, especially if you’re not running it constantly. Editing the footage after is pretty quick once you get the hang of it.