Vueroid is pitching its new S1 QHD Infinite 2-Channel dash cam at the ugliest moment in car ownership: a crash, hit-and-run, or parking-lot impact where the camera either caught the plate or it did not.
The company has added the S1 QHD Infinite 2-Channel to its dash cam lineup with 2,560 x 1,440-pixel recording, front and rear cameras, 24-hour parking surveillance, GPS geofencing, and Infinite Plate Capture license plate enhancement, according to Notebookcheck. The two-camera model lists for $279.99, while the three-camera version lists for $309.99.
Vueroid’s new S1 QHD is built around the moment a dash cam usually fails
The headline feature is not just QHD resolution. It is the always-on parking design.
Vueroid says the S1 QHD uses 24-hour parking surveillance and draws only 1 mA when not recording. That matters because parked incidents are often the ones with the least human context: no driver in the seat, no immediate witness, and no second chance to reposition the camera.
The dash cam includes a built-in 2.3-inch LCD screen, but the source does not specify exactly which playback, menu, or alert functions are available through that display. That distinction matters. A screen is useful hardware, but buyers should not assume it replaces the app experience unless Vueroid documents those controls clearly.
The S1 QHD records through front and rear cameras, both using Sony Starvis 2 sensors. Vueroid says those sensors support clear low-light and nighttime recordings. Both cameras capture 2,560 x 1,440-pixel video at 30 fps through 160° wide-angle lenses.
For readers tracking car-facing interfaces, this launch sits near the same broader driver-tech question MLXIO covered in CarPlay in iOS 26 Hides a Screen Fix Drivers Need: when information appears in the car, the details of the display and implementation matter as much as the spec sheet.
QHD recording and night capture target the evidence gap after a crash
The S1 QHD’s 2,560 x 1,440 video gives Vueroid more image data to work with than a standard 1080p frame. In a dash cam, that can be the difference between a clip that shows an event happened and a clip that preserves enough detail to examine a vehicle, lane position, road sign, or plate area.
That is the hardware case for QHD. The software case is Infinite Plate Capture, or IPC, Vueroid’s license plate enhancement feature. Notebookcheck describes IPC as helping identify those involved in causing a crash from HDR recordings.
Vueroid also offers a three-camera variant with an interior camera. The source identifies the extra camera but does not provide its resolution, field of view, or recording behavior.
| Model | Cameras | MSRP | Noted configuration |
|---|---|---|---|
| S1 QHD Infinite 2-Channel | Front + rear | $279.99 | QHD front/rear recording |
| S1 QHD three-camera model | Front + rear + interior | $309.99 | Adds an interior camera |
Both models are also available on Amazon with a $40 discount until June 15, 2026, according to the source material.
Vueroid previously framed the S1 Infinite line around reliability at SEMA 2025, saying the product was designed to keep watch even when parked. The company’s release said the dash cam wakes after an impact and then returns to standby.
“When an impact occurs, the dashcam instantly wakes up within one second to capture the moment and then returns to power-saving standby mode automatically,” Vueroid said in its SEMA materials.
That claim is central to the product’s value. It is also exactly the kind of claim that needs independent testing, because parking-mode performance depends on installation, battery condition, heat, storage behavior, and how quickly the camera captures useful frames after waking.
GPS geofencing makes the parking mode less blunt
The built-in GPS is not just for tracking. Vueroid says the S1 QHD can automatically disable parking surveillance when the vehicle is parked inside a safe, geofenced location, such as a secured garage.
That is a practical feature if it works cleanly. Parking surveillance is useful in exposed lots and public streets. It is less useful in a controlled garage where the driver may prefer lower power use and fewer recordings.
The source does not say whether the geofence is configured through a mobile app, the built-in screen, or another interface. It also does not specify whether GPS data is embedded in video files, stored separately, or exported with clips.
That leaves several buyer-facing questions open:
- GPS controls: How are geofenced safe zones created and edited?
- Storage behavior: What happens to recordings when the memory card fills?
- Privacy settings: Can location logging be limited or disabled?
- App dependency: Which features require Vueroid software rather than the dash cam itself?
- Subscription status: The source material does not mention a subscription requirement.
This is where Vueroid’s hardware pitch needs software clarity. A dash cam can have strong sensors and still frustrate users if GPS, clip export, and parking-mode controls are buried or poorly documented.
AI plate restoration is the feature that needs proof on real roads
Vueroid is promoting AI license plate enhancement as a core reason to choose the S1 QHD. In SEMA materials, the company said its Hub app uses AI-driven deep learning restoration to enhance blurry video and refine details such as license plates and moving objects, based on a dataset of more than 150,000 real-world driving images.
That is a sharper claim than generic “AI” branding. It also creates a clear test.
Plate enhancement has to work under ugly conditions: glare, rain, motion blur, bad angles, speed differences, dirty plates, and low light. The source says the S1 QHD has HDR recordings, Sony Starvis 2 sensors, and AI enhancement. It does not show independent results across those scenarios.
The S1 QHD also fits a broader consumer hardware pattern MLXIO has tracked in launches such as Shokz OpenDots Air Grabs OpenDots 2 Features for $70 Less: the pitch is not one feature in isolation, but whether the feature mix justifies the price.
For Vueroid, the watch item is straightforward. If independent testing confirms that QHD video, low-light capture, 1 mA parking standby, GPS geofencing, and IPC plate enhancement produce cleaner evidence than ordinary dash cam footage, the S1 QHD’s value case is clear. If the AI restoration only works in narrow conditions, buyers may treat it as a useful extra rather than the reason to upgrade.
Key Takeaways
- The S1 QHD targets parked crashes and hit-and-runs with 24-hour surveillance.
- QHD front and rear recording with Sony Starvis 2 sensors is aimed at improving nighttime evidence quality.
- The $279.99 starting price puts advanced dash cam features like GPS geofencing and plate enhancement into a consumer-focused package.










