Augustus
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2016
- Messages
- 4,213
- Reaction score
- 2,698
- Location
- Perth, Australia
- Country
- Australia
- Dash Cam
- Viofo, Vantrue, 70mai, Wolfbox
It's 2026, and we have the first release of the year for 70mai, the A810S. This is the follow-up to the highly successful A810 from a few years ago. Once again, we have the tried and true Starvis 2 IMX678 sensor on-board, with the main changes being an improved 1080p rear Starvis 2 sensor and the move to a supercapacitor from the previous model's battery. The rear sensor is the RC24 model featuring the Starvis 2 IMX662, a model shared with other models in 70mai's line-up. The front camera's aperture has also been improved from F1.8 to F1.7, and Wi-Fi 6 is now present from last model's Wi-Fi 4. New to the 4K A810S is the option of a new RC23 waterproof rear camera, which contains the same IMX662 sensor but can be mounted on the exterior of a vehicle.
Turning once again to the box contents, we have the two-tone finish with orange lettering that has been on other models such as the 4K M800. Upon opening the box we have the slick black packaging, with two separate envelopes containing the required materials. Contained within is instruction manuals, electrostatic stickers front and rear cameras, spare mounting adhesives, black plastic pry tool, 12V cigarette lighter (with additional USB-A port), and their respective power cablings.
First impressions are solid of the 4K A810S. The lenses of the front and rear cameras are adjustable via swivel, with a 3-inch IPS display (no touchscreen) taking up the majority of the real estate of the front camera. There are also multiple ventilation holes on both the front and rear camera sensors - with plenty of these holes available to dissipate the heat produced by the Starvis 2 sensors.
Features from previous 70mai models also make a welcome return here. Buffered emergency parking mode, Lumi Vision for parking mode to brighten very dimly-lit scenarios, time-lapse recording and battery voltage monitoring all make a return, along with support for their existing 4G parking surveillance kits, UP04/UP05.
Installation of the 4K A810S was once again a straight-forward process, and so was it's integration with the 4G parking UP04 kit. Included firmware version was v1.1.26ww, out of the factory. Would like to extend my gratitude to 70mai once again for providing me with this opportunity to test-drive the 4K A810S. Over the coming weeks, I'll be sharing my detailed findings with you all - stay tuned for my full review coming soon here on DashCamTalk forum.
Some close-up photos of the 70mai 4K A810S:
Turning once again to the box contents, we have the two-tone finish with orange lettering that has been on other models such as the 4K M800. Upon opening the box we have the slick black packaging, with two separate envelopes containing the required materials. Contained within is instruction manuals, electrostatic stickers front and rear cameras, spare mounting adhesives, black plastic pry tool, 12V cigarette lighter (with additional USB-A port), and their respective power cablings.
First impressions are solid of the 4K A810S. The lenses of the front and rear cameras are adjustable via swivel, with a 3-inch IPS display (no touchscreen) taking up the majority of the real estate of the front camera. There are also multiple ventilation holes on both the front and rear camera sensors - with plenty of these holes available to dissipate the heat produced by the Starvis 2 sensors.
Features from previous 70mai models also make a welcome return here. Buffered emergency parking mode, Lumi Vision for parking mode to brighten very dimly-lit scenarios, time-lapse recording and battery voltage monitoring all make a return, along with support for their existing 4G parking surveillance kits, UP04/UP05.
Installation of the 4K A810S was once again a straight-forward process, and so was it's integration with the 4G parking UP04 kit. Included firmware version was v1.1.26ww, out of the factory. Would like to extend my gratitude to 70mai once again for providing me with this opportunity to test-drive the 4K A810S. Over the coming weeks, I'll be sharing my detailed findings with you all - stay tuned for my full review coming soon here on DashCamTalk forum.
Some close-up photos of the 70mai 4K A810S:


