CCTVPLANNER.IO · CAMERA · MARCH NETWORKS

    March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome

    Dome Camera with 2.1MP (1920×1080) resolution, 134° field of view, and 0m IR night vision range.

    NO.01
    2.1MP
    Resolution
    NO.02
    134°
    Horizontal FOV
    NO.03
    12m
    Effective Range
    NO.04
    0m
    IR Range

    SPECIFICATIONS · MARCH NETWORKS SE2 NANODOME

    Specifications

    Resolution2.1MP (1920×1080)
    Focal Length2.3mm
    Horizontal FOV134°
    Effective Range12m
    IR Range0m
    TypeDome Camera
    Low LightStandard

    About the March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome

    The March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome is a low-profile dome enclosure that blends into ceilings, vandal-resistant by design and harder to tamper with than bullet cameras. 1080p Full HD remains the most widely deployed CCTV resolution in 2026 — it balances bandwidth, storage, and detail well, supporting facial identification up to roughly 12 meters in good light. There is no built-in IR illuminator on this model, so it depends entirely on ambient light. In dark environments, pair it with external IR floods or white-light illuminators. An ultra-wide angle (>120°) captures nearly an entire scene from one position, but pixels per meter drops sharply at the edges, so identification at the periphery is limited.

    Best use cases for this camera

    Entrance, lobby & vestibule

    The 134° field of view captures the entire entrance and surrounding waiting area from a single ceiling mount. Useful for capturing visitors as they enter and leave.

    Retail & office interior

    Dome form factor and 2.1MP (1920×1080) resolution make this a clean retail/office choice — the housing blends into ceilings and the sensor delivers enough detail for POS-area monitoring and incident review.

    Strengths

    • 134° wide field of view reduces the number of cameras needed per area
    • Vandal-resistant dome housing harder to tamper with than bullet form factor

    Considerations

    • No built-in IR — requires external illumination for night use
    • Edge distortion and reduced peripheral pixel density limit identification at the corners of the frame

    Coverage at Different Distances

    DistanceCoverage WidthCoverage AreaUse Case
    5m23.6m118Entrance, corridor
    10m47.1m471Room, retail aisle
    15m70.7m1060Warehouse, parking row
    20m94.2m1885Parking row, courtyard
    30m141.4m4241Parking lot, yard
    50m235.6m11779Perimeter, large area

    Field of View Visualization

    Camera12m134° FOVEffective rangeIR range (0m)

    Night Vision Performance

    Daytime

    Full 2.1MP (1920×1080) resolution at 134° field of view. Effective identification range up to 12m in good lighting conditions.

    Nighttime (IR)

    Built-in IR LEDs illuminate up to 0m in complete darkness. Switches to B/W mode for clear night footage.

    Installation tips for the March Networks SE2 NanoDome

    1

    Ceiling-mount at 2.5–3.5 m for indoor use; for vandal-prone outdoor locations use a wall mount with the lens facing outward and downward.

    2

    Position so the most important subject (entrance, cash register, gate) is in the center third of the frame — peripheral pixel density drops with wide angles.

    Coverage geometry & DORI distances

    At a 5-metre standoff the March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome covers about 23.6 m of scene width; at 10 m that grows to 47.1 m, and at 20 m to 94.2 m. Translating those numbers through EN 62676-4 pixel-density thresholds, the camera can detect a person up to 16 m, observe up to 7 m, recognise up to 3 m, and produce identification-grade detail (the ≥250 px/m bar used by Polish and EU courts as evidentiary) up to 2 m. Effective range above the identify threshold relies on supplementary lighting or a longer-focal-length optic — the geometry above assumes the 2.3mm lens declared by the manufacturer.

    Detect
    16 m
    Observe
    7 m
    Recognise
    3 m
    Identify
    2 m

    Power & cabling

    The March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome draws an estimated 5.5 W under typical load (with the IR illuminator engaged where applicable), placing it in the 802.3af (Class 3, ≤15.4 W) budget. A single switch port supplies enough power without an injector. Cabling: stick to Cat6 STP for runs up to 100 m end-to-end — beyond that, add an inline PoE extender or move to fibre with a media converter at the camera end. On outdoor runs, route through ø25 PVC or PE conduit to keep the cable shielded from UV and rodents.

    Privacy & legal (GDPR / RODO)

    Any camera operating in a publicly accessible area falls under GDPR (RODO in Poland) — Art. 13 obliges the data controller to post an information sign at every entry point with controller name, DPO contact, lawful basis (typically Art. 6(1)(f) legitimate interest for property protection), purpose, and retention period. Even a narrowly-aimed dome camera can incidentally record passers-by, so the Art. 13 sign at the entry point applies regardless of how tightly the lens is framed.

    Installer time & cost (rough estimate)

    A typical EU installer quotes 3–4 h of labour per dome camera of this class (approximately €135–€185 excluding hardware), broken down as bracket mounting, cable termination at both ends, on-site commissioning, and a brief operator handover. Allow extra time for high mounts (>4 m), exterior installations requiring scaffolding, or sites where cable routing demands wall penetrations or conduit work.

    Indicative EU 2024-2025 pricing — actual quotes vary by region, mounting height, and site conditions. Excludes hardware, transport, permits, and VAT.

    Frequently asked questions

    Is the March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome suitable for outdoor installation?

    Yes for the IP66/IP67-rated variant of this model. Bullet and dome bodies in the March Networks range survive direct rain, snow and UV; check the IP / IK rating against your environment (IP66 for rain/dust, IK10 for vandal-prone locations).

    What PoE class powers the March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome?

    The camera draws roughly 5.5 W in steady-state operation, requiring a 802.3af (Class 3, ≤15.4 W) switch port. A single Cat6 STP cable carries both data and power up to 100 m — beyond that, add an inline extender or convert to fibre near the camera.

    How much storage does the March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome consume per day?

    At 2.1MP (1920×1080) resolution, 15 fps H.265 continuous recording, the March Networks SE2 NanoDome produces approximately 8 GB per day — about 240 GB per month. Motion-only or event-triggered recording typically cuts that by 40–70 % depending on scene activity. Plan NVR HDD capacity for the longest retention period required by your privacy policy or insurance contract.

    Up to what distance can the March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome identify a person?

    Per EN 62676-4:2025 pixel-density thresholds, this camera identifies (≥ 250 px/m on the target) up to about 2 m, recognises a person up to 3 m, observes general activity up to 7 m, and detects motion up to 16 m. Identification distance assumes daylight or full IR illumination on the target — at the limits of the IR cone the effective identify distance shrinks roughly 30 %.

    What network bandwidth does March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome use?

    Typical ingest is 3 Mbps for the main stream (H.265, medium scene complexity, 15 fps) plus ~0.5 Mbps for a low-resolution sub-stream used by mobile clients. For a 16-camera installation of this class, plan a 50–100 Mbps NVR uplink and a dedicated VLAN for camera traffic.

    Related March Networks Dome Cameras

    Other March Networks cameras

    Helpful Tools & Resources

    Plan your layout with March Networks March Networks SE2 NanoDome

    Use our free CCTV planner to place this camera on your floor plan, see real-time field of view coverage, and generate a professional PDF report.

    Free until you outgrow it · No card · No install