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    Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S

    16ch WAVE PoE+ NVR, 16× PoE+ (200 W), 4 HDD (24 TB), Ubuntu Linux

    View official datasheet
    NO.01
    16
    Channels
    NO.02
    4
    HDD Bays
    NO.03
    24 TB
    Max Raw Storage
    NO.04
    16
    PoE Ports

    SPECIFICATIONS · WRN-1610S

    Full specifications

    Channels16
    Max ResolutionN/A
    Input BandwidthN/A
    Output BandwidthN/A
    HDD Bays4
    Max HDD per Bay6 TB
    PoE Ports16
    PoE Budget200 W
    CodecsH.264, H.265, MJPEG
    RAID SupportNone
    ONVIFYes
    Form FactorN/A
    Network PortsN/A
    Alarm I/ON/A

    Specifications sourced from official manufacturer datasheet (link in hero).

    About the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S

    The Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S is a mid-channel recorder positioned for the most common SMB site — typical retail chains, mid-sized offices, warehouses and clinics that sit between roughly eight and sixteen cameras. Storage capacity sits in the comfort zone for month-long retention at typical channel resolutions, with room to drop archived footage onto cold storage as it ages out. The desktop chassis sits on a shelf, IT bench or wall-mount tray and runs cool enough that ventilation is not a serious design constraint. Built-in PoE on every channel (16 ports for 16 channels) lets the unit operate as a self-contained appliance — patch each camera directly into the back panel and the NVR powers, addresses and records them without an external switch. Convenient for small installs; on larger sites a dedicated managed PoE switch is still the cleaner architecture.

    Best use cases for this recorder

    Small retail & single-tenant office

    Built-in PoE means the entire install fits in one cabinet — cameras patch straight into the recorder, no extra switch to specify or maintain. 16 channels cover a typical front-of-house plus stockroom and parking layout.

    SMB site — office, school, clinic, hotel

    The 16-channel/4-bay combination sits in the most-shipped slot for SMB CCTV: enough channels for a mid-sized site, enough storage for 30-60 day retention at typical commercial-camera bitrates.

    Strengths

    • 16 built-in PoE ports eliminate the need for an external switch on small installs
    • H.265 codec roughly halves storage cost over legacy H.264 installs
    • ONVIF compliance lets the unit record from third-party cameras, not just the same-brand catalog
    • Compact chassis fits in a half-height comms cabinet or office bench

    Considerations

    • Maximum per-channel resolution not declared in the datasheet — confirm with the vendor before specifying high-MP cameras
    • No RAID support — single-disk failure means losing all footage on that disk; plan retention policy accordingly

    Storage planning

    Running all 16 channels at the industry-typical 4 Mbps/channel H.265 CBR (15 fps, 4 MP scene complexity), the WRN-1610S produces roughly 675 GB of footage per day — about 4725 GB/week, 20250 GB/month, and 60750 GB across a 90-day retention window. Fully populated with 4× 6 TB drives the unit holds 24 TB raw — enough for roughly 1.2× the one-month archive at full bitrate before RAID overhead. These figures are deterministic — derived from your bitrate assumption, the channel count, and the calendar — not estimated from a marketing data sheet.

    1 day
    675 GB
    7 days
    4.6 TB
    30 days
    19.8 TB
    90 days
    59.3 TB

    Estimates assume 4 Mbps per channel H.265 CBR continuous recording. Motion-only recording typically reduces storage by 40-70%.

    Installation tips for the WRN-1610S

    1

    Locate on a shelf in a ventilated, lockable cupboard — desktop units pull dust through the chassis quickly when sat on a carpeted floor, and the HDDs need ambient temperatures under 30 °C for rated life.

    2

    Plan storage at roughly 675 GB/day (≈20250 GB/month) for continuous H.265 recording at 4 Mbps/channel — match HDD capacity to the longest retention window the privacy policy or insurance contract demands.

    3

    Distribute high-power cameras (PTZ, heated housings) across the 16 built-in PoE ports — concentrating them on a single port group can exceed the per-port PoE budget even when the chassis total has headroom.

    4

    Place the recorder on a dedicated VLAN with the cameras — separating CCTV traffic from office VLANs avoids broadcast storms degrading recording quality during busy network hours.

    Power & rack

    Power draw sits at roughly 50 W idle and around 220 W under full load (4-bay HDD activity plus 200 W of PoE delivered to cameras). That dissipates approximately 751 BTU/hour of heat into the rack — size the comms-cabinet ventilation accordingly. On desktop placement, raise the unit on rubber feet or a vented tray rather than directly on carpet — the chassis pulls cooling air through bottom intakes and dust ingress is the primary cause of premature HDD failure.

    Idle
    50 W
    Full load
    220 W
    Heat
    751 BTU/h

    Installer time & cost (rough estimate)

    A typical EU integrator quotes 5-7 h of labour to commission the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S (approximately €225-€315 excluding hardware), broken down as physical install, HDD population, 16-channel discovery and IP/credential configuration, schedule + retention setup, motion / event rules per camera, mobile-app pairing, and a brief operator handover. Allow extra time for sites with non-standard network topology (multi-VLAN, multi-site bridges) or for migrations from a legacy DVR where camera streams must be re-addressed.

    Indicative EU 2024-2025 pricing — actual quotes vary by region, network topology and migration scope. Excludes hardware, HDDs, transport, permits, and VAT.

    Frequently asked questions

    How many cameras can the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S record?

    Up to 16 IP camera channels per chassis. The ingest bandwidth ceiling is not declared in the datasheet — confirm with the vendor before specifying high-bitrate (4K, 12 MP) cameras across all channels.

    Does the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S support third-party (ONVIF) cameras?

    Yes — ONVIF Profile S/T support means the unit records from third-party cameras as well as the same-brand catalog. Most cameras supporting ONVIF 16.12 or newer plug-and-play; older firmware may require manual stream URL configuration in the NVR web UI.

    How much storage does the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S need for 30-day recording?

    At the industry-typical 4 Mbps per channel H.265 CBR (15 fps, 4 MP scene), all 16 channels recording continuously for 30 days produces approximately 20250 GB (19.8 TB) of footage. Motion-only or event-triggered recording typically cuts that by 40-70 % depending on scene activity. Plan HDD capacity for the longest retention window your privacy policy or insurance contract demands.

    What HDDs are recommended for the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S?

    Use surveillance-rated HDDs — WD Purple, Seagate SkyHawk, Toshiba S300, or equivalent. Desktop / consumer drives (WD Blue, Seagate Barracuda) are not validated for 24/7 write workloads and typically fail within 12-18 months in CCTV use. Max 6 TB per bay across 4 bays = up to 24 TB raw capacity; populate matched pairs/sets if planning RAID.

    Does the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S need its own PoE switch?

    Not on small installs — 16 built-in PoE ports power and connect cameras directly to the recorder. On larger sites a dedicated managed PoE switch is still the cleaner architecture: separate failure domain, larger PoE budget, easier replacement.

    What power and cooling does the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S need?

    Plan for 50 W idle and ~220 W under full load, dissipating roughly 751 BTU/hour into the rack or cupboard. Size the UPS for at least 15-minute hold-up so the unit can flush write buffers and shut down cleanly on mains failure — abrupt power loss is the leading cause of NVR file-system corruption in commercial installs.

    Is the Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S suitable for evidentiary recording?

    Depends on the retention and chain-of-custody policy. The 4-bay chassis supports basic mirroring on the install side, but lacks declared RAID 5/6 parity — verify with the vendor whether RAID is supported in newer firmware On the export side, ensure footage is hashed and timestamped before transfer to investigators.

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    Helpful Tools & Resources

    Plan your CCTV layout with Hanwha Vision WRN-1610S

    Use our free CCTV planner to lay out cameras feeding this recorder, match HDD capacity to retention windows, and generate a professional PDF report — no signup required.

    Free until you outgrow it · No card · No install