What is loop recording?
Loop recording lets your Dash Cam continuously record by automatically overwriting the oldest unprotected footage when the SD card is full. This means you always capture the most recent driving without having to delete files manually.
How does loop recording work?
Loop recording continuously records by overwriting the oldest unprotected footage when your SD card is full. This keeps the most recent driving footage available without manual deletion.
Your Dash Cam stores video in 1-minute clips. When capacity is reached, it overwrites oldest unprotected files. Protected files (from G-sensor events) are safe until Protected space fills.
Example: A 32GB SD card holds ~4 hours of Full HD video. After 5 hours of driving, the oldest 1 hour gets overwritten.
Protected files (for example, from a G‑sensor event) are not overwritten in the normal loop, unless the Protected‑file space limit is reached.
Why are video segments so short?
1-minute segments make loop recording efficient by replacing only oldest clips. They are easier to:
Share specific moments.
View without large files.
Transfer to phone or computer.
Why does loop recording matter?
It ensures continuous recording without stopping mid-journey. Protected files stay safe temporarily, but back up important clips to phone, computer, or cloud before Protected space or SD card fills.
Extra tips
Use larger SD cards (128GB+) for more recording time before looping.
Format SD card monthly to clear old Protected files and maintain performance.
Lower resolution increases recording time if storage fills quickly.
Troubleshooting
Dash Cam stops recording: SD card full of Protected files or corrupted. Format card.
Missing recent footage: Check loop recording is enabled in settings.
Files won't play: Use high-endurance SD card designed for Dash Cams.
