Technical forensics for the Frienhund 6L chassis indicate a mechanical drive system utilizing a standard brushed DC motor with plastic gearing. The 1080p CMOS sensor includes an IR-cut filter to manage spectral transitions during night vision operation. Connectivity is limited to 2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n, which provides a 110-degree field of vision but displays 5-10 seconds of latency on cellular data networks.
The power interface uses a 5V/2A USB connection, with a D-cell backup circuit required to maintain the internal clock during power cycles. Material analysis of the internal impeller confirms a low-torque rating, which can lead to motor jam errors when processing non-spherical or hard kibble varieties. The system lacks local API support for third-party home automation integration.
Structural features include a 6L hopper and a desiccant compartment intended for moisture control. Aggregated data suggests that scheduled feeding databases are cloud-reliant, potentially failing to execute if the 2.4GHz connection is interrupted during the trigger window.
For environments with 5GHz-dominant networking, the Frienhund HD WiFi model offers a more specialized 2.4GHz IoT chipset for improved pairing stability. This unit represents a standard implementation of 6L pet feeder cameras hardware.