Thinkware Z300 <VERIFIED>

Wiring it is equally thoughtful. The kit includes a hardwiring cable for parking mode, but unlike competitors that drain your battery to zero, the Z300 uses a voltage cutoff system you set via its app (12.4V, 12.0V, or 11.8V). You tell the camera how much to respect your car’s soul (the starter battery), and it listens. The spec sheet says “2K QHD (2560x1440) at 30fps.” But the story is in the sensor: a Sony STARVIS IMX335 . For the uninitiated, STARVIS is the night-vision of the dash cam world. It doesn't see in the dark; it negotiates with the dark.

Here is the narrative twist: you apply the film to the glass, then mount the camera to the film. If you sell the car, the camera comes off without leaving a sticky scar. It’s a small mercy, but it tells you everything about Thinkware’s philosophy: This device is a tool, not a decoration. thinkware z300

By: Tech Correspondent, J. Park

And that, dear driver, is worth every penny. Wiring it is equally thoughtful

The Z300 uses a . It is blind to light. It only sees actual movement of mass . A person walks near your bumper? The radar yawns. A shopping cart rolls within two feet? The radar ignores it. But when a teenager in a lifted pickup swings his door open into your driver’s side door—the radar screams . The camera instantly wakes from its deep sleep, records a 20-second clip (10 seconds before impact, 10 seconds after), and sends a push notification to your phone via Wi-Fi. The spec sheet says “2K QHD (2560x1440) at 30fps