
Dash cams are getting smarter, but not every driver wants to pay 4K flagship prices just to get better front and rear coverage. That is where VUEROID’s new S1 QHD Infinite comes in. It takes several of the ideas from the company’s higher-end S1 Infinite line and packages them into a QHD system aimed at drivers who want multi-camera recording, parking protection, and app-based AI tools without jumping straight to a premium 4K kit.
The VUEROID S1 QHD Infinite is now available at Amazon in two configurations. The S1 QHD Infinite 2CH is priced at $279.99, while the S1 QHD Infinite 3CH is priced at $309.99. The difference is simple: the 2-channel model covers the front and rear of the vehicle, while the 3-channel version adds an interior camera for cabin recording.
That third camera is especially relevant for rideshare drivers, delivery drivers, families, or anyone who wants a record of what happens inside the vehicle as well as outside it. For most everyday drivers, though, the main decision will come down to whether front/rear coverage is enough, or whether the extra $30 for interior recording is worth it.

The S1 QHD Infinite records in 2560 x 1440 resolution from both the front and rear cameras at 30 frames per second. That places it above basic 1080p systems, but below the company’s 4K models. In real-world terms, QHD can be a useful middle ground: it captures more detail than Full HD, but usually creates smaller files than 4K, which matters when you are saving hours of loop-recorded footage to a microSD card.
The 3CH version adds a 1920 x 1080 interior camera, also at 30 frames per second. VUEROID lists Sony STARVIS 2 IMX675 sensors for the front and rear cameras, while the interior camera uses a Sony STARVIS IMX307 sensor.

The core camera setup breaks down like this:
VUEROID also includes built-in GPS and Wi-Fi. GPS is useful for attaching speed and route data to footage, while Wi-Fi lets users connect through the VUEROID Hub app for viewing, transferring, trimming, and sharing clips.

The most unusual feature here is VUEROID’s AI toolset. The company highlights two main AI functions: AI License Plate Restoration and AI Privacy Protection.
The license plate tool is designed to help recover details from blurred plate footage. That could matter when motion blur, distance, or lighting makes a plate hard to read in the original video. Users select the area of the clip where the plate appears, then process it through VUEROID’s app or PC viewer using the company’s cloud-based system.
That should not be treated as magic evidence enhancement. VUEROID notes that AI-generated results should be reviewed by the user and used as a reference. Still, it is an interesting direction for dash cams, because license plates are often the exact detail people need after a hit-and-run, parking incident, or road dispute.

The second AI feature goes in the opposite direction. AI Privacy Protection can blur personal information, including license plates and pedestrian faces. That is useful for anyone sharing dash cam footage online, sending a clip to another person, or publishing video without exposing people who were simply passing by.
The S1 QHD Infinite is also built around parking mode. VUEROID says its Extreme Low Power Parking Mode draws under 1mA in standby and can begin recording in under one second after impact detection. The system also supports impact and motion recording, impact and timelapse recording, battery protection settings, and an Auto REC Off Zone mode that can turn off parking recording in familiar locations.
That last feature is a practical one. A driver may not need parking recording at home in a locked garage, but may want it active at a public lot, curbside space, or office parking area.

VUEROID includes a hardwire parking cable in the box, along with a CPL filter, cigar jack cable, USB-C data cable, fuse tap, cable clips, trim tool, foam tape, and user manual. The inclusion of installation hardware matters because parking mode often requires extra cables or accessories on cheaper dash cams.
The S1 QHD Infinite looks like it is aimed at drivers who care more about coverage and parking protection than chasing the highest possible resolution. A 4K front camera may still appeal to users who want maximum detail from the forward view, but this QHD model gives both the front and rear cameras the same 1440p resolution and keeps the 3CH version close in price to the 2CH model.
The 2CH version makes sense for regular commuters who mainly want road and rear coverage. The 3CH version is the better fit for rideshare drivers, parents, or anyone who wants cabin footage without buying a separate interior camera later.
At $279.99 for the 2CH kit and $309.99 for the 3CH kit, the VUEROID S1 QHD Infinite enters a crowded dash cam market with a few clear talking points: dual QHD recording, Sony sensor hardware, AI plate and privacy tools, and parking features included out of the box. The main question for buyers is whether those extras matter more than stepping up to a 4K front-camera system.
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