
Haval H6 screen can play videos. Related information: Haval H6: The Haval H6 is the flagship model under the Haval brand. On August 25, 2011, the Haval H6, positioned as an urban intelligent SUV, was grandly launched at the Great Wall Motors Tianjin new factory, offering Mitsubishi 2.0L gasoline-powered models and Green Power 2.0T diesel models, divided into Urban, Elite, and Premium versions. Features: The Haval H6 incorporates more fashionable, intelligent, and luxurious urban design elements. With its stylish and elegant appearance, warm interior, and intelligent equipment throughout the vehicle, it meets the emotional and functional dual needs of urban SUV enthusiasts. It boasts four major highlights: intelligent luxury, intelligent space, leading technology, and fashionable safety. The vehicle offers excellent driving and handling, comfort, and comprehensive safety protection.

It depends on the model year of your car. I've seen many owners of older Haval H6 models at the dealership specifically installing multimedia modules, which can play videos from a USB drive with an adapter. However, most factory-installed systems can only play MP3s, and even playing back dashcam footage can be laggy. Nowadays, there's a popular CarPlay to HDMI converter box in the auto parts market. Once plugged in, it can not only project phone navigation onto the screen but also play Bilibili videos. I've installed it for three customers, mainly for their kids in the back seat to watch cartoons. But be aware that the front screen automatically locks video playback while driving, and this safety setting cannot be changed. Modifying the car's infotainment system requires skill; if done improperly, it can burn out the circuit board.

An owner of the 3rd-gen Haval H6 tells you: The new model is indeed impressive! Last week, I used the built-in video player in the infotainment system to watch "The Knockout," but it only recognizes MP4 format. Here's a little tip—you need to fully stop the car, then tap the Media Center on the left side of the central screen and select local file playback. The USB port is located in the storage compartment in front of the gear lever. However, the screen automatically goes black when driving—this safety feature cannot be turned off. I recommend installing rear headrest screens for more practicality; you can get a pair on Taobao for just over 700 yuan, and kids won’t fuss during long rides.

Video playback involves automotive-grade hardware standards. The Haval H6 infotainment system differs from household tablets—factory settings enforce screen lock during driving to comply with mandatory ISO 26262 safety standards. Early models required dashboard disassembly and system flashing to enable video playback. Current versions support parking-mode viewing, but note resolution and bitrate limits: tests show smooth 720P playback while 1080P stutters. Recommend using Format Factory to transcode with H.264 compression (e.g. a 2GB "The Wandering Earth" file shrinks to 800MB). Avoid streaming with cellular data—vehicle data plans are notoriously expensive.


