Hanwha QND-7082R vs i-PRO S35402-F2LG: Specification Comparison
Both the Hanwha QND-7082R and the i-PRO WV-S35402-F2LG are 4MP wired IP dome cameras aimed at professional CCTV installations. The QND-7082R is specified as an indoor unit with a motorized varifocal lens and 20 m IR, while the S35402-F2LG is an outdoor-rated compact dome with a fixed 2.4 mm wide-angle lens, IP66/IK10 housing, and AI-class analytics. Buyers comparing them are typically choosing between flexible indoor zoom coverage and ruggedized outdoor wide-angle AI capability.
In This Guide
How do the imaging specs compare?
Both cameras deliver 4MP at 2560×1440 and share the same 30 fps ceiling (the S35402-F2LG is rated 25/30 fps depending on region). The QND-7082R uses a 1/3" CMOS sensor with a 3.2–10 mm (3.1×) motorized varifocal lens, giving a horizontal field of view that ranges from 98.6° wide to 30.8° tele — useful when exact coverage angles are unknown at installation time. The S35402-F2LG employs an approx. 1/2.8" CMOS with a fixed 2.4 mm lens at F2.1, producing a fixed 121° horizontal field; the larger sensor format generally captures more light per pixel.
On low-light performance, the QND-7082R reaches 0.1 lux (color) and 0 lux with its 20 m IR illuminator. The S35402-F2LG is rated 0.19 lux color / 0.16 lux B&W, dropping to 0 lux with IR active at a shorter 14 m (High) / 10 m (Medium) range. WDR is 120 dB on the Hanwha versus a specified 132 dB maximum on the i-PRO (Super Dynamic level 31), giving the i-PRO a measurable edge on simultaneous highlight/shadow handling.
What about installation and environment?
The QND-7082R carries no IP or IK rating per the provided specifications and is designated Indoor use only, with an operating range of -10 °C to +55 °C. The S35402-F2LG is rated IP66, NEMA 4X, and IK10 (IEC 62262), with a wind resistance spec of up to 40 m/s, and an operating range of -40 °C to +50 °C — making it the only candidate for outdoor or harshly conditioned environments. The Hanwha's pan/tilt/rotate range (0–350° / 0–67° / 0–355°) accommodates flexible dome positioning; the i-PRO lists pan -45° to +45°, tilt 0–90°, yaw -90° to +90°.
Both cameras are PoE-powered at 8.6 W maximum draw. The QND-7082R is rated PoE Class 3 (IEEE 802.3af) and also accepts 12 VDC; the S35402-F2LG is listed PoE Class 0 (IEEE 802.3af) with no secondary DC input spec provided. The Hanwha's housing is plastic/white (RAL 9003, Ø119.8 × 98.8 mm, 320 g); the i-PRO uses aluminum die-cast construction (109 × 53 × 119 mm, 475 g), which contributes to its IK10 impact resistance.
Which fits your VMS and analytics better?
Both cameras declare ONVIF Profile S, G, and T compatibility. The Hanwha adds Profile G and also exposes Hanwha's proprietary SUNAPI (HTTP API), broadening native VMS integration options for Hanwha-ecosystem NVRs. The i-PRO additionally supports ONVIF Profile M (which covers metadata and AI object streams). Network protocol depth is comparable: both support HTTPS/SSL, SNMPv1/v2c/v3, LLDP, IEEE 802.1X, NTP, FTP, and SMTP; the S35402-F2LG adds SFTP and MQTT per its spec sheet.
Analytics diverge significantly. The QND-7082R offers video-analytics functions including motion detection (4 polygonal zones), defocus detection, directional detection, enter/exit, virtual line, and tampering — all traditional rule-based analytics. The S35402-F2LG provides AI-based detection for motion, face, people, vehicle, mask/non-mask, and occupancy, plus AI Sound Classification (gunshot, yell, vehicle horn, glass break) and Scene Change Detection. Both include a built-in microphone; neither lists audio output per the provided specs. Edge storage reaches 128 GB (microSD) on the Hanwha versus 512 GB (microSDXC) on the i-PRO. The i-PRO supports up to 14 simultaneous streams; the Hanwha supports unicast up to 6 users with up to 3 profiles.
Which should you choose: the QND-7082R or the S35402-F2LG?
Our take: The WV-S35402-F2LG is the stronger choice when the deployment demands outdoor durability, AI-class analytics, or extended temperature tolerance. Its IP66/IK10/NEMA 4X housing and -40 °C floor make it viable in environments where the QND-7082R — rated indoor-only down to -10 °C with no IP or IK rating — simply cannot be installed. The i-PRO's 132 dB Super Dynamic WDR exceeds the Hanwha's 120 dB spec, and its onboard AI engine (face, people, vehicle, mask, occupancy, sound classification) far surpasses the Hanwha's rule-based analytics suite. The i-PRO also doubles edge-storage headroom at 512 GB versus 128 GB. Conversely, the QND-7082R is the better fit for indoor applications requiring adjustable coverage: its 3.1× motorized varifocal lens (3.2–10 mm, 98.6°–30.8° H) allows post-install FOV tuning that the i-PRO's fixed 2.4 mm lens cannot match. It also offers a 5-year longer warranty window — 3 years — wait, the i-PRO carries a 5-year warranty versus the Hanwha's 3-year warranty, further favoring the i-PRO on lifecycle cost.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Spec-for-spec, from manufacturer data.
| Specification | Hanwha QND-7082R | i-PRO S35402-F2LG |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution | 2560×1440 (4MP) | 2560×1440 (4MP) |
| Image Sensor | 1/3" CMOS | Approx. 1/2.8" CMOS |
| Lens / Focal Length | 3.2–10 mm motorized varifocal (3.1×) | 2.4 mm fixed |
| Horizontal Field of View | 98.6° (Wide) – 30.8° (Tele) | 121° |
| Max Aperture | F1.6 (Wide) / F2.9 (Tele) | F2.1 |
| Min Illumination (Color) | 0.1 lux | 0.19 lux @ 30IRE |
| Min Illumination (B&W / IR) | 0 lux (IR) | 0.16 lux B&W; 0 lux (IR) |
| IR Range | 20 m (65.6 ft) | 14 m High / 10 m Medium |
| Wide Dynamic Range | 120 dB | 132 dB max (Super Dynamic level 31) |
| Max Frame Rate | 30 fps | 25/30 fps |
| Video Compression | H.265, H.264, MJPEG | H.265, H.264, JPEG |
| IP / Ingress Rating | — | IP66, NEMA 4X |
| Impact Rating | — | IK10 (IEC 62262) |
| Operating Temperature | -10 °C to +55 °C | -40 °C to +50 °C |
| Power Input / PoE Class | PoE IEEE 802.3af Class 3; 12 VDC | PoE IEEE 802.3af Class 0 |
| Max Power Consumption | 8.6 W | 8.6 W |
| Edge Storage | microSD/SDHC/SDXC up to 128 GB | microSDXC/SDHC/SD up to 512 GB |
| ONVIF Profiles | S, G, T | G, M, S, T |
| AI / Analytics | Rule-based: motion, defocus, enter/exit, virtual line, tampering, directional | AI: motion, face, people, vehicle, mask, occupancy; AI sound classification; SCD |
| Audio | Built-in microphone (input) | Built-in microphone (input) |
| Simultaneous Streams / Users | Up to 6 unicast users; 3 profiles | Up to 14 users |
| Environment Rating | Indoor only | Indoor / Outdoor |
| Dimensions | Ø119.8 × 98.8 mm | 109 × 53 × 119 mm |
| Weight | 320 g (0.71 lb) | 475 g (1.05 lb) |
| Housing Material | Plastic | Aluminum die-cast |
| Warranty | 3 years | 5 years |
Frequently Asked Questions
Which should you choose: the QND-7082R or the S35402-F2LG?
The WV-S35402-F2LG is the stronger choice when the deployment demands outdoor durability, AI-class analytics, or extended temperature tolerance. Its IP66/IK10/NEMA 4X housing and -40 °C floor make it viable in environments where the QND-7082R — rated indoor-only down to -10 °C with no IP or IK rating — simply cannot be installed. The i-PRO's 132 dB Super Dynamic WDR exceeds the Hanwha's 120 dB spec, and its onboard AI engine (face, people, vehicle, mask, occupancy, sound classification) far surpasses the Hanwha's rule-based analytics suite. The i-PRO also doubles edge-storage headroom at 512 GB versus 128 GB. Conversely, the QND-7082R is the better fit for indoor applications requiring adjustable coverage: its 3.1× motorized varifocal lens (3.2–10 mm, 98.6°–30.8° H) allows post-install FOV tuning that the i-PRO's fixed 2.4 mm lens cannot match. It also offers a 5-year longer warranty window — 3 years — wait, the i-PRO carries a 5-year warranty versus the Hanwha's 3-year warranty, further favoring the i-PRO on lifecycle cost.
Is the QND-7082R or WV-S35402-F2LG better for low-light performance?
The QND-7082R reaches 0.1 lux in color mode and 0 lux with its 20 m IR illuminator. The S35402-F2LG is rated 0.19 lux color / 0.16 lux B&W and drops to 0 lux with IR active, but its IR range is shorter at 14 m (High) or 10 m (Medium). For longer-range IR throw in a dark indoor corridor, the Hanwha has the edge; for scenes with mixed bright and dark areas, the i-PRO's 132 dB Super Dynamic WDR outperforms the Hanwha's 120 dB rating.
Can the WV-S35402-F2LG be used outdoors where the QND-7082R cannot?
Yes. The S35402-F2LG is rated IP66, NEMA 4X, and IK10, operates from -40 °C to +50 °C, and is wind-resistance tested to 40 m/s. The QND-7082R carries no IP or IK rating per its published specifications and is designated for indoor use only with a -10 °C lower operating limit, making it unsuitable for outdoor or wet-location installation.
Which camera offers more advanced analytics — the QND-7082R or the WV-S35402-F2LG?
The S35402-F2LG offers significantly more advanced analytics. It includes AI-based detection for face, people, vehicle, mask/non-mask, and occupancy, plus AI Sound Classification covering gunshot, yell, vehicle horn, and glass break, as well as Scene Change Detection. The QND-7082R provides rule-based analytics — motion detection (4 polygonal zones), defocus detection, directional detection, enter/exit, virtual line, and tampering — with no AI object-classification capability listed in its specifications.
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