DrekiTech
Active Member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2015
- Messages
- 276
- Reaction score
- 247
- Location
- Vancouver, BC
- Country
- Canada
- Dash Cam
- A129
DDpai sent a copy of this camera for review.
This camera has a minimalist design made from matte black plastic. The camera is solid feeling with smooth rounded curves and a smoothly rotating lens. The only markings on the camera body are a gold 4K badge up front beside the lens. The buttons are not marked, instead showing their function on the display. This keeps the camera super low profile and allows it to blend into a vehicle, as it looks like OEM equipment. Good thing it’s easier to hide, as this camera is not removable from its sticker mount. There’s no way to remove it from the vehicle without undoing the sticker mount. The Z50 would not be suitable for someone who wants to use one dashcam in multiple vehicles.
There is a nice help guide on camera which explains memory card issues if they do pop up.
Make sure to set this camera to H265 mode. By default it operates in H264 mode which is wildly compressed at a 27,000Mb/s. This results in lots of blocky artifacts. The H265 mode is at the same bitrate but due to better compression does not have as many issues with artifacts. Other than that, there is a good amount of detail during the day thanks to the IMX415 image sensor. DDPai has set the sharpness and saturation to high, providing footage that is super vivid. Color balance on the front camera is good. In some settings the highlights are blown out, but for the most part front video is overall fine detail wise.
The biggest downside is the 25FPS cap. Even at 2K, this camera only films in 25FPS. It’s not super choppy, but it is definitely less smooth when compared directly to other cameras that film at 30 or 60FPS. Plus, at night there can be subtle flickering with lights due to North American power infrastructure being at 60hz (divisible by 30, not 25). I even tried filming with just the font camera to see if it would offer increased frame rates, but this is not the case. There is some motion blur with oncoming license plates but the camera does a respectable job freezing motion for the low FPS.
Audio quality is just awful. It’s super quiet and over compressed, which makes it sound like talking over a bad phone connection while standing in the next room over. DDPai needs to increase the volume and compression of the audio if they don’t change anything else about this camera after this review.
Night footage is about average in the budget 4K category. This camera gets a passing grade because some license plates are readable when stopped and the camera overall does a decent job with exposure. There is some flickering on street lights. When it is pitch black where there are tons of noise but that is a trade off with using a real 4K image sensor versus something with bigger pixels and the ability to gather more light.
Specifications
- 4K 25FPS Front Recording (Sony IMX415)
- 1080p 25FPS Rear Recording
- Built-in Capacitor
- Wi-Fi App
- Starting Price of around $99 – $110 depending on sales for the front camera, about $139 for the dual channel.
Summary
The DDPai Z50 is inexpensive and well-built, but the arbitrary 25 FPS limitation and lack of polish on the firmware keep it from being a hit. Some features like the super capacitor are generally only found in more expensive cameras, and even adding the optional 1080p rear camera keeps the price under $140. While this camera at least turns on, records and turns off with the car, other options in this price bracket are more mature software wise.Build Quality
This camera has a minimalist design made from matte black plastic. The camera is solid feeling with smooth rounded curves and a smoothly rotating lens. The only markings on the camera body are a gold 4K badge up front beside the lens. The buttons are not marked, instead showing their function on the display. This keeps the camera super low profile and allows it to blend into a vehicle, as it looks like OEM equipment. Good thing it’s easier to hide, as this camera is not removable from its sticker mount. There’s no way to remove it from the vehicle without undoing the sticker mount. The Z50 would not be suitable for someone who wants to use one dashcam in multiple vehicles.
User Interface
The UI of the Z50 is super simple. There’s a preview of the video footage, playback of existing footage and few settings. On camera, the only advanced setting available is setting the screensaver or formatting the memory card. Nearly everything else needs to be done through the app. But even in the app, few settings are available. For video resolutions the options are:- 4K
- 2K 1600p (squished)
- 1080p
There is a nice help guide on camera which explains memory card issues if they do pop up.
Video Quality – Front Camera
Make sure to set this camera to H265 mode. By default it operates in H264 mode which is wildly compressed at a 27,000Mb/s. This results in lots of blocky artifacts. The H265 mode is at the same bitrate but due to better compression does not have as many issues with artifacts. Other than that, there is a good amount of detail during the day thanks to the IMX415 image sensor. DDPai has set the sharpness and saturation to high, providing footage that is super vivid. Color balance on the front camera is good. In some settings the highlights are blown out, but for the most part front video is overall fine detail wise.
The biggest downside is the 25FPS cap. Even at 2K, this camera only films in 25FPS. It’s not super choppy, but it is definitely less smooth when compared directly to other cameras that film at 30 or 60FPS. Plus, at night there can be subtle flickering with lights due to North American power infrastructure being at 60hz (divisible by 30, not 25). I even tried filming with just the font camera to see if it would offer increased frame rates, but this is not the case. There is some motion blur with oncoming license plates but the camera does a respectable job freezing motion for the low FPS.
Audio quality is just awful. It’s super quiet and over compressed, which makes it sound like talking over a bad phone connection while standing in the next room over. DDPai needs to increase the volume and compression of the audio if they don’t change anything else about this camera after this review.
Night footage is about average in the budget 4K category. This camera gets a passing grade because some license plates are readable when stopped and the camera overall does a decent job with exposure. There is some flickering on street lights. When it is pitch black where there are tons of noise but that is a trade off with using a real 4K image sensor versus something with bigger pixels and the ability to gather more light.