You're upgrading your car with a wireless CarPlay display. Lamtto has two 11-inch options — the RC32 and the RC35. Same size, same brand. Easy to get confused.
But under the hood, they're built for different drivers.
Here's the honest breakdown: what's the same, what's different, and which one actually fits your needs.
At a Glance
| RC32 | RC35 | |
|---|---|---|
| Screen | 11" 1920×720, 60FPS | 11" 1280×800 |
| Processor | 8-Core | Standard |
| OS | Full Android with Google Play | Built-in entertainment apps (no Play Store) |
| AI Assistant | Gemini AI | Standard Google Assistant / Siri |
| Backup Camera | 1080P with DVR loop recording | AHD Backup Camera (IP67) |
| Boot Time | Standard | 2-second instant boot |
| Split-Screen | Any two apps side-by-side | — |
| GPS | Built-in GPS chip (works offline) | Phone-dependent (via CarPlay/AA) |
| Warranty | 1 Year | 1 Year |
What's the Same
Both devices share a solid foundation:
- 11-inch touchscreen — but with different aspect ratios (more on that below)
- Wireless CarPlay & Wireless Android Auto — no cables between phone and screen
- Plug-and-play installation — mounts in minutes, no professional needed
- Dual Wi-Fi + Dual Bluetooth — stable connection, no dropouts
- Backup camera included — each comes with a rear camera and 256-inch cable
- AUX & FM audio output — route sound through your car speakers
- 1-year warranty — with lifetime technical support
- Free worldwide shipping from US, EU, CA, AU, JP warehouses

Where They Differ
1. Screen Design: Narrow & Low-Profile vs. Tall & Immersive
Both are 11 inches, but the shape matters more than the number.
RC32 uses a 1920×720 ultra-wide aspect ratio — lower and narrower in profile. This is intentional. When mounted on your dashboard or windshield, it sits closer to the dash line and takes up less vertical space. Less windshield blocked. Less distraction. Better forward visibility. If you drive a car with a tighter cockpit or simply don't want a screen looming in your line of sight, the RC32's shape is the smarter fit.
RC35 uses a 1280×800 resolution — taller by comparison, giving you more vertical screen real estate. Maps show more of the road ahead. Video fills the display more fully. The overall presence on your dashboard is larger and more immersive. If you want maximum screen impact and don't mind a slightly taller profile on your dash, the RC35 delivers.
| RC32 | RC35 | |
|---|---|---|
| Screen feel | Slim, low-profile, discreet | Taller, larger presence, immersive |
| Windshield view | Minimal obstruction | Moderate — more screen, more visible |
| Best for | Drivers who prioritize visibility | Drivers who prioritize screen size |
2. The Brain: 8-Core + Google Play vs. Streamlined Entertainment
This is the second biggest divide.
RC32 runs a full Android operating system with Google Play. You can download anything — Netflix, YouTube, Spotify, Waze, Sygic, Disney+, even productivity apps. It's essentially an Android tablet built into your dashboard. The experience expands over time: new apps, new features, new possibilities.
RC35 comes with entertainment apps pre-installed — YouTube, TikTok, Prime Video, Spotify, Hulu, Rumble — but no Google Play access. You use what's already there, which covers most people's daily needs perfectly. The upside: simpler interface, less to manage.
What this means in practice:
- Want to install offline navigation like Sygic or HERE Maps? You need the RC32.
- Just want YouTube and TikTok for road trip entertainment? RC35 has you covered.
- Want to explore new apps over time? RC32's openness matters.
- Want a no-fuss, get-in-and-drive experience? RC35's simplicity is a feature, not a bug.
3. AI Assistant: Gemini vs. Standard Voice Control
The RC32 is one of the first CarPlay screens to integrate Google Gemini AI. This means natural-language conversations, not robotic "say a command" interactions:
"Hey Google, I'm tired. Find me a coffee shop with good reviews within 10 miles."
"What's that warning light on my dashboard?"
"Play something that matches this scenery."
The RC35 uses the standard Siri / Google Assistant voice control through CarPlay or Android Auto — which handles calls, messages, and basic navigation reliably.
4. Display Fluidity: 60FPS vs. Standard Refresh
RC32: 1920×720 at 60 frames per second. Smoother animations, crisper text, and a noticeably premium viewing experience — especially when scrolling through maps or watching video content.
RC35: 1280×800 at standard refresh rate. Still a clean HD IPS display that looks good in daily use. The slightly taller aspect ratio shows a touch more map vertically compared to the RC32.
5. Backup Camera: DVR Recording vs. Standard AHD
RC32 includes a 1080P camera that doubles as a dash cam with loop recording (requires a TF card, not included). You get both a backup camera and front-facing accident protection in one device.
RC35 includes an AHD backup camera (IP67 waterproof) with a dedicated rear-view button — check behind you anytime without shifting into reverse. Flipping or mirroring the image is one tap if mounted upside-down. Solid performer, no recording function.
6. Navigation: Built-in GPS vs. Phone-Dependent
RC32 has its own built-in GPS chip. Download offline maps and you can navigate with zero phone connection. Your phone dies mid-trip or you're driving through a dead zone? Navigation keeps running.
RC35 relies on your phone's GPS through CarPlay or Android Auto. For 99% of daily driving, this works exactly the same. The difference only matters when you're off-grid or your phone runs out of battery.
7. Boot-Up Speed: Instant vs. Standard
RC35 advertises a 2-second boot time — ready to go before you've buckled your seatbelt. This is genuinely impressive and one of the RC35's standout features.
The RC32, with its full Android OS and 8-core processor, takes a moment longer to boot — the trade-off for running a complete operating system.
Who Should Buy the RC32?
The RC32 is for the driver who wants a low-profile, high-IQ co-pilot.
Pick RC32 if you:
- Want a slim screen that doesn't block your windshield view
- Want to install specific apps from Google Play beyond what's pre-loaded
- Care about smooth 60FPS display quality
- Value having a built-in GPS chip for offline navigation
- Want the dash cam recording feature built into the backup camera
- Like the idea of Gemini AI that understands natural conversation
- See yourself exploring new apps and features over time
Who Should Buy the RC35?
The RC35 is for the driver who wants a big, immersive screen that just works.
Pick RC35 if you:
- Want the largest-feeling screen for maps and video entertainment
- Value instant 2-second boot-up every time you start the car
- Mainly use YouTube, TikTok, and Spotify — not niche apps
- Don't need offline GPS or dash cam recording
- Prefer a "just works" experience over managing an app ecosystem
- Are buying for a second vehicle or as a gift
The RC35 is not a "stripped-down" version — it's a deliberately focused product. If its pre-installed apps cover your needs, you're not missing a thing.
The Honest Summary
| You care about… | Winner |
|---|---|
| Low-profile, unobtrusive design | RC32 |
| Large immersive screen presence | RC35 |
| Performance & smoothness | RC32 (8-core, 60FPS) |
| Fastest boot | RC35 (2 seconds) |
| App selection & flexibility | RC32 (Google Play) |
| AI assistant smarts | RC32 (Gemini) |
| Camera recording | RC32 (DVR loop recording) |
| Simplicity | RC35 |
One way to think about it:
The RC35 is a premium CarPlay screen that does one thing exceptionally well — gets you wireless CarPlay and entertainment on a big, immersive 11-inch display, instantly.
The RC32 is a smart car computer that happens to include CarPlay — in a slim, low-profile body that stays out of your sightline. More powerful, more capable, more discreet.
Both will transform your daily drive. It just depends on whether you want maximum smarts or maximum simplicity — and whether you prefer your screen to blend in or stand out.


















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