Bosch MIC-7604-Z12WR vs Bosch NDP-7804-Z12L

CAMERA COMPARISON

Bosch MIC-7604-Z12WR vs Bosch NDP-7804-Z12L: Specification Comparison

Both the Bosch MIC-7604-Z12WR and NDP-7804-Z12L are 8MP PTZ cameras from Bosch's 7100i platform, sharing a 1" CMOS sensor, 12x optical zoom (9.3–111.6mm), H.265/H.264/MJPEG compression, IK10 impact resistance, and PoE power. The primary differentiator is deployment environment: the MIC-7604-Z12WR is rated for indoor use, while the NDP-7804-Z12L is engineered for outdoor perimeter applications with IR illumination and a broader ingress-protection rating.



How do the imaging specs compare?

Both cameras share an 8MP (30 fps) 1" CMOS sensor with a 9.3–111.6mm varifocal lens and 62 dB Wide Dynamic Range. Minimum color illumination is nearly identical: 0.292 lux for the MIC-7604-Z12WR versus 0.2998 lux for the NDP-7804-Z12L — a negligible real-world difference. In monochrome/B&W, the MIC-7604-Z12WR specifies 0.011 lux, whereas the NDP-7804-Z12L is listed at 0 lux B&W, consistent with active IR illumination driving the sensor to near-zero threshold.

The NDP-7804-Z12L uses 850 nm (visible red glow) IR illumination for active night vision, enabling true 0 lux B&W operation. The MIC-7604-Z12WR uses 940 nm invisible IR, reaching a specified 0.011 lux B&W floor — suitable for indoor low-light but not true darkness without supplemental lighting. Both cameras support multi-streaming, but the NDP-7804-Z12L provides 4 simultaneous streams versus 3 for the MIC-7604-Z12WR, which may matter in high-channel-count VMS deployments.


What about installation and environment?

The MIC-7604-Z12WR is rated for indoor environments with IP67 sealing and IK10 impact resistance, an operating range of -40°C to +65°C (-40°F to +149°F), and PoE 802.3af power. Despite the indoor rating, its IP67 and wide temperature range make it suitable for harsh interior spaces such as warehouses or cold-storage facilities. Mounting options include wall, pole, corner, and rack. The housing is white.

The NDP-7804-Z12L is purpose-built for outdoor deployment, rated IP66/IK10, with an operating range of -40°C to +50°C (-40°F to +122°F) — a narrower upper limit of +50°C compared to the MIC's +65°C. Its power input is specified as PoE++ (802.3bt) in the product specs, though the tilde-prefixed field notes 802.3af; installers should verify PoE budget against the NDA-7100-PA1H mount accessory. Physical specs are provided: 210.65mm × 324mm (Ø × H), 5.80 kg, aluminum housing. Mounting options include wall, pole, pendant, corner, and rack — the pendant option is exclusive to the NDP-7804-Z12L.


Which fits your VMS and analytics better?

Both cameras are NDAA-compliant and support ONVIF (the MIC-7604-Z12WR explicitly lists ONVIF Profile M). Both carry the same IVA Pro analytics suite — IVA Pro Buildings, IVA Pro Perimeter, and IVA Pro Privacy — and both support intelligent tracking. The MIC-7604-Z12WR additionally lists People Counting as a discrete analytics feature; this spec is absent for the NDP-7804-Z12L in the provided data.

Both units include built-in audio input and alarm inputs/outputs, and both support local storage via microSD/SDHC/SDXC cards. Cloud connectivity is noted as supported on both. Encryption on the MIC-7604-Z12WR covers TLS 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, AES-128, and AES-256. The NDP-7804-Z12L specifies TLS 1.2, TLS 1.3, AES-128, and AES-256 — dropping legacy TLS 1.0/1.1 and adding TLS 1.3, which is preferable from a cybersecurity compliance standpoint. The NDP-7804-Z12L also lists 4096 MB RAM and 8192 MB Flash onboard, though equivalent memory specs are not provided for the MIC-7604-Z12WR.


Which should you choose: the MIC-7604-Z12WR or the NDP-7804-Z12L?

Our take: The MIC-7604-Z12WR is the stronger choice when the installation is indoors and an invisible IR source (940 nm) is required to avoid drawing attention, or when upper ambient temperatures can reach +65°C — 15°C higher than the NDP-7804-Z12L's +50°C ceiling. The NDP-7804-Z12L is the correct selection for any outdoor perimeter deployment: it adds active 850 nm IR for true 0 lux B&W night performance (versus 0.011 lux on the MIC), supports 4 simultaneous streams rather than 3, specifies TLS 1.3 encryption where the MIC tops out at TLS 1.2, and includes a pendant mount option the MIC lacks. Both cameras are otherwise closely matched on sensor, lens, WDR, analytics, audio, and storage. Platform qualifier: if your VMS or SOC requires the highest stream count, prefers modern TLS, or the site is outdoors, specify the NDP-7804-Z12L; choose the MIC-7604-Z12WR for indoor or extreme-heat environments needing covert IR.


Side-by-Side Comparison

Spec-for-spec, from manufacturer data.

SpecificationBosch MIC-7604-Z12WRBosch NDP-7804-Z12L
Resolution8MP @ 30fps8MP @ 30fps
Image Sensor1" CMOS1" CMOS
Lens / Focal Length9.3–111.6mm varifocal, 12x motorized zoom9.3–111.6mm varifocal, 12x optical zoom
Min. Illumination (Color)0.292 lux0.2998 lux
Min. Illumination (B&W)0.011 lux0 lux
IR Illumination940 nm (invisible)850 nm (visible glow)
Wide Dynamic Range62 dB62 dB
Video CompressionH.265, H.264, MJPEGH.265, H.264, MJPEG
Multi-Streaming3 streams4 streams
IP RatingIP67IP66
IK / Impact RatingIK10IK10
Operating Temperature-40°C to +65°C (-40°F to +149°F)-40°C to +50°C (-40°F to +122°F)
Environment RatingIndoorOutdoor
Power InputPoE 802.3afPoE++ 802.3bt (per product spec)
EncryptionTLS 1.0/1.1/1.2, AES-128, AES-256TLS 1.2/1.3, AES-128, AES-256
Edge StoragemicroSD/SDHC/SDXCmicroSD/SDHC/SDXC
AudioBuilt-in audio inputBuilt-in audio input
Alarm I/OYesYes
ONVIFYes (Profile M)Yes
NDAA CompliantYesYes
Mounting OptionsWall, Pole, Corner, RackWall, Pole, Pendant, Corner, Rack
Dimensions (Ø × H)210.65mm × 324mm
Weight5.80 kg
Housing MaterialAluminum
WarrantyManufacturer WarrantyManufacturer Warranty

Frequently Asked Questions

Which should you choose: the MIC-7604-Z12WR or the NDP-7804-Z12L?

The MIC-7604-Z12WR is the stronger choice when the installation is indoors and an invisible IR source (940 nm) is required to avoid drawing attention, or when upper ambient temperatures can reach +65°C — 15°C higher than the NDP-7804-Z12L's +50°C ceiling. The NDP-7804-Z12L is the correct selection for any outdoor perimeter deployment: it adds active 850 nm IR for true 0 lux B&W night performance (versus 0.011 lux on the MIC), supports 4 simultaneous streams rather than 3, specifies TLS 1.3 encryption where the MIC tops out at TLS 1.2, and includes a pendant mount option the MIC lacks. Both cameras are otherwise closely matched on sensor, lens, WDR, analytics, audio, and storage. Platform qualifier: if your VMS or SOC requires the highest stream count, prefers modern TLS, or the site is outdoors, specify the NDP-7804-Z12L; choose the MIC-7604-Z12WR for indoor or extreme-heat environments needing covert IR.

Is the MIC-7604-Z12WR or NDP-7804-Z12L better for low-light performance?

For true darkness, the NDP-7804-Z12L is the stronger performer: its 850 nm active IR illumination drives B&W sensitivity to a specified 0 lux. The MIC-7604-Z12WR uses 940 nm invisible IR and reaches 0.011 lux B&W — excellent for indoor low-light but not rated for complete darkness. Color sensitivity is nearly identical (0.292 lux vs. 0.2998 lux).

Can I use the NDP-7804-Z12L indoors, or is it only for outdoor use?

The NDP-7804-Z12L is spec'd and rated for outdoor use (IP66, -40°C to +50°C), but its ingress protection and impact ratings would not preclude an indoor installation. However, its upper operating temperature (+50°C) is lower than the MIC-7604-Z12WR's (+65°C), so in hot indoor environments such as industrial facilities, the MIC-7604-Z12WR has the thermal edge.

Do both cameras support the same video analytics and VMS integrations?

Yes — both carry the full IVA Pro suite (Buildings, Perimeter, Privacy), intelligent tracking, ONVIF, and NDAA compliance. The MIC-7604-Z12WR additionally lists People Counting in the provided specs; this feature is not listed for the NDP-7804-Z12L in the available data. On cybersecurity, the NDP-7804-Z12L adds TLS 1.3 support, which is absent on the MIC-7604-Z12WR.



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