Hanwha QNV-6082R1 vs i-PRO X35302-F2L: Specification Comparison
Both the Hanwha QNV-6082R1 and the i-PRO WV-X35302-F2L are 2MP outdoor vandal-resistant dome cameras aimed at the commercial IP surveillance market. The Hanwha ships a motorized varifocal lens and 30m IR reach, while the i-PRO pairs a fixed wide-angle lens with AI-driven analytics and a 144dB dynamic range engine. Installers and IT buyers evaluating mid-tier outdoor domes will find these genuinely cross-shoppable on resolution, form factor, and environmental ratings, though they diverge sharply on lens flexibility, AI capability, and temperature tolerance.
In This Guide
How do the imaging specs compare?
The QNV-6082R1 uses a 1/2.8-inch 2MP CMOS sensor delivering 1920×1080 at 30fps. Its 3.2–10mm motorized varifocal lens (3.1x zoom, F1.6 wide / F2.9 tele) provides field-of-view flexibility at commissioning, with a horizontal field of view that narrows significantly at tele versus the fixed i-PRO. Minimum illumination is 0.03 lux color and 0 lux with IR; the IR illuminator reaches 30m. WDR is rated at 120dB via Hanwha's SSDR engine. DORI performance at tele reaches a Detect range of 128.8m and an Identify range of 12.9m.
The WV-X35302-F2L also uses a 1/2.8-inch 2MP CMOS but outputs 2048×1536 — a higher pixel count than the QNV-6082R1's 1920×1080. Its 2.4mm fixed lens delivers a 132° horizontal field of view (16:9), making it a wide-angle scene-coverage camera rather than a variable-zoom unit. Minimum illumination is 0.02 lux color and 0 lux with IR; IR reach is 21m at 30 IRE / 15m at 50 IRE. Dynamic range reaches 144dB maximum with Super Dynamic enabled at level 31, versus 120dB on the Hanwha. The i-PRO's DORI Detect range is 17.1m — substantially shorter than the QNV-6082R1 at tele, reflecting its fixed wide-angle design.
What about installation and environment?
Both cameras carry IP66 and IK10 ratings. The i-PRO adds NEMA 4X and Type 4X (UL50E) listings, which may be required for certain industrial or North American code-compliance installations. The QNV-6082R1 accepts PoE (IEEE 802.3af, Class 3) or 12VDC, drawing up to 7.7W. The WV-X35302-F2L is PoE only (PoE Class 0 per spec, IEEE 802.3af compliant per datasheet notation), drawing up to 8.6W. The Hanwha lists compatibility with single-gang, double-gang, and 4-inch octagon conduit boxes; the i-PRO spec does not enumerate conduit/gangbox compatibility.
The operating temperature range is a significant differentiator. The QNV-6082R1 is rated -30°C to +55°C. The WV-X35302-F2L is rated -40°C to +60°C (with a power-on lower limit of -20°C), providing wider thermal headroom at both extremes. The i-PRO also carries railway/vehicle application certifications (EN50155, JIS E5006, IEC62236, EN50121) that the Hanwha does not list. The QNV-6082R1 weighs 710g (1.57 lb); the WV-X35302-F2L weighs approximately 475g (1.05 lb). The Hanwha includes a CVBS analog output for installation alignment; the i-PRO does not list an analog video output.
Which fits your VMS and analytics better?
Both cameras support ONVIF Profiles G, M, S, and T. The QNV-6082R1 additionally supports Hanwha's SUNAPI (HTTP API) and Wisenet Open Platform for third-party app integration. Its smart codec is WiseStream II. It supports up to 6 simultaneous unicast users and up to 3 stream profiles, with edge storage via microSD/SDHC/SDXC up to 128GB in one slot. Analytics include defocus detection, directional detection, enter/exit, virtual line, and tampering — plus 4-zone polygonal motion detection and 6 rectangular privacy masks. There is no listed audio input or output on this model, and no audio compression is specified.
The WV-X35302-F2L supports up to 14 simultaneous users and offers edge storage via microSDXC up to 512GB (microSDHC up to 32GB). Its AI analytics suite — running on an Ambarella CV25M SoC — includes AI Video Motion Detection, Face Detection, People Detection, Scene Change Detection, and AI Sound Classification (gunshot, yell, vehicle horn, glass break). The camera has a built-in microphone with audio detection; audio compression includes G.726 (32/16 kbps), G.711 (64 kbps), and additional formats. The i-PRO also carries FIPS 140-2 Level 3 and signed firmware certification, which matters in government and critical-infrastructure deployments. VIQS (variable image quality on specified zones) is supported with up to 8 zones.
Which should you choose: the QNV-6082R1 or the X35302-F2L?
Our take: The WV-X35302-F2L is the stronger choice when AI-driven edge analytics, extreme temperature tolerance, or compliance certifications (FIPS 140-2 Level 3, NEMA 4X, EN50155) are project requirements. Three concrete spec deltas: the i-PRO's dynamic range reaches 144dB versus 120dB on the Hanwha; its operating range extends to -40°C / +60°C versus -30°C / +55°C; and its AI suite adds Face Detection, People Detection, and AI Sound Classification that the QNV-6082R1 does not list. The QNV-6082R1 is the stronger choice when lens flexibility is required — its 3.2–10mm motorized varifocal provides a 3.1x optical zoom and a tele DORI Detect range of 128.8m, far exceeding the i-PRO's fixed 2.4mm wide-angle and 17.1m Detect range. It also accepts 12VDC in addition to PoE and includes a CVBS output for alignment. Platform qualifier: the Hanwha suits Wisenet-centric VMS environments needing zoom flexibility; the i-PRO suits open or compliance-heavy deployments prioritizing AI analytics, wide-area fixed coverage, and deeper certifications.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Spec-for-spec, from manufacturer data.
| Specification | Hanwha QNV-6082R1 | i-PRO X35302-F2L |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution | 1920×1080 | 2048×1536 |
| Image Sensor | 1/2.8" 2MP CMOS | Approx. 1/2.8" type CMOS |
| Lens / Focal Length | 3.2–10mm motorized varifocal (3.1x) | 2.4mm fixed |
| Horizontal Field of View | 109.0° (wide) — narrows at tele | 132° (16:9) |
| Min. Illumination (Color) | 0.03 lux | 0.02 lux |
| Min. Illumination (IR) | 0 lux | 0 lux |
| IR Range | 30m | 21m (30 IRE) / 15m (50 IRE) |
| Wide Dynamic Range | 120dB | 144dB max (Super Dynamic level 31) |
| Max Frame Rate | 30fps | Variable (max not specified in provided specs) |
| Video Compression | H.265, H.264 (Main/High), MJPEG | H.265, H.264 |
| Audio | None listed | Built-in mic; G.726, G.711 compression |
| AI Analytics | Defocus, directional, enter/exit, virtual line, tampering | AI VMD, Face Detection, People Detection, AI Sound Classification |
| IP Rating | IP66 | IP66, NEMA 4X, Type 4X (UL50E) |
| IK / Impact Rating | IK10 | IK10 |
| Operating Temperature | -30°C to +55°C | -40°C to +60°C (power-on: -20°C min) |
| Power Input / PoE Class | PoE 802.3af Class 3 or 12VDC; 7.7W max | PoE 802.3af Class 0; 8.6W max |
| Edge Storage | microSD/SDHC/SDXC up to 128GB | microSDXC up to 512GB |
| ONVIF Profiles | G, M, S, T | G, M, S, T |
| Security Certifications | HTTPS, 802.1X (EAP-TLS, EAP-LEAP) | FIPS 140-2 Level 3, HTTPS, IEEE 802.1X |
| Weight | 710g (1.57 lb) | Approx. 475g (1.05 lb) |
| Warranty | 3-year | 5-year |
Frequently Asked Questions
Which should you choose: the QNV-6082R1 or the X35302-F2L?
The WV-X35302-F2L is the stronger choice when AI-driven edge analytics, extreme temperature tolerance, or compliance certifications (FIPS 140-2 Level 3, NEMA 4X, EN50155) are project requirements. Three concrete spec deltas: the i-PRO's dynamic range reaches 144dB versus 120dB on the Hanwha; its operating range extends to -40°C / +60°C versus -30°C / +55°C; and its AI suite adds Face Detection, People Detection, and AI Sound Classification that the QNV-6082R1 does not list. The QNV-6082R1 is the stronger choice when lens flexibility is required — its 3.2–10mm motorized varifocal provides a 3.1x optical zoom and a tele DORI Detect range of 128.8m, far exceeding the i-PRO's fixed 2.4mm wide-angle and 17.1m Detect range. It also accepts 12VDC in addition to PoE and includes a CVBS output for alignment. Platform qualifier: the Hanwha suits Wisenet-centric VMS environments needing zoom flexibility; the i-PRO suits open or compliance-heavy deployments prioritizing AI analytics, wide-area fixed coverage, and deeper certifications.
Is the QNV-6082R1 or WV-X35302-F2L better for low-light performance?
Both cameras reach 0 lux with IR active. In color mode, the WV-X35302-F2L is specified at 0.02 lux versus 0.03 lux for the QNV-6082R1 — a marginal difference. However, the i-PRO's IR illuminator reaches 21m (30 IRE), while the Hanwha's reaches 30m, giving the QNV-6082R1 a longer usable IR range for identifying subjects at distance.
Can either camera handle extreme cold, such as a northern outdoor installation that drops below -30°C?
Only the WV-X35302-F2L is rated for temperatures below -30°C. Its ambient operating range is -40°C to +60°C (with a power-on minimum of -20°C). The QNV-6082R1 is specified to -30°C minimum. For installations in climates that regularly reach -35°C or colder, the i-PRO is the only option of these two with a listed spec covering that range.
Which camera is easier to aim and adjust after installation?
The QNV-6082R1 offers more post-install flexibility: its 3.2–10mm motorized varifocal lens allows remote zoom adjustment without physically accessing the camera, and its pan (0°–350°), tilt (0°–67°), and rotate (0°–355°) ranges are fully specified. The WV-X35302-F2L uses a fixed 2.4mm lens with no optical zoom; its adjusting angle is pan ±45°, tilt 0°–90°, yaw ±90°. For scenes where field-of-view tuning is needed after deployment, the Hanwha's motorized varifocal is the practical advantage.
Get a Second Opinion on Your Camera Choice
Share your site layout, coverage goals, and budget. Our team will validate the camera selection, flag anything we would change, and recommend products that match the use case.

