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Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2
WRR-P-E200S2 — 128-channel NVR, 8 HDD bays, 32 MP
SPECIFICATIONS · WRR-P-E200S2
Full specifications
Specifications sourced from official manufacturer datasheet (link in hero).
About the Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2
The Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2 is a mega-channel NVR aimed at sites that would otherwise need clustered storage — airports, stadiums, multi-site retail, transport hubs. High-capacity HDD bay count carries 60-180 day retention without external storage at typical commercial-camera bitrates, and supports RAID protection so single-disk failure does not lose footage. A single rack-unit slim chassis keeps the install footprint minimal and leaves headroom in the cabinet for a PoE switch, UPS and patch panel above it. No PoE ports are built into the recorder, so cameras connect through a separate PoE switch. That is the preferred architecture on professional installs because a dedicated managed switch gives finer VLAN control, larger PoE budgets, and easier replacement than an integrated switch tied to the NVR chassis.
Best use cases for this recorder
Campus, factory, logistics & critical infrastructure
At 128 channels per chassis, the unit consolidates what would otherwise be 2-4 mid-range NVRs into a single rack appliance. Useful where licensing per-chassis matters and where consolidating storage onto one RAID set simplifies forensic retrieval.
4K/8MP camera deployments
Native support for 32 MP per-channel recording matches it to current-generation 4K cameras — useful when the install plan calls for fewer-but-higher-resolution cameras (typical of perimeter, parking, and identification-focused layouts).
Long-retention archive & evidentiary recording
8 HDD bays at up to 16 TB each give the unit petabyte-class storage capacity, supporting 6-12 month retention windows mandated by some banking, retail-loss-prevention, and public-transport contracts.
Strengths
- •128-channel headroom absorbs phased expansion without forcing a second chassis
- •8 HDD bays support RAID protection for evidentiary recording
- •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
- •470 Mbps ingest bandwidth supports the unit at full channel count at 4K resolution
Considerations
- •No built-in PoE — budget for a separate managed PoE switch with appropriate per-port wattage for the planned cameras
- •Average per-channel ingest budget is below typical 4K bitrates — restrict high-MP channels or accept lower bitrate per camera
- •No RAID support — single-disk failure means losing all footage on that disk; plan retention policy accordingly
Storage planning
Running all 128 channels at the industry-typical 4 Mbps/channel H.265 CBR (15 fps, 4 MP scene complexity), the WRR-P-E200S2 produces roughly 5400 GB of footage per day — about 37800 GB/week, 162000 GB/month, and 486000 GB across a 90-day retention window. Fully populated with 8× 16 TB drives the unit holds 128 TB raw — enough for roughly 0.8× 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.
Estimates assume 4 Mbps per channel H.265 CBR continuous recording. Motion-only recording typically reduces storage by 40-70%.
Bandwidth headroom
Input (ingest)
Avg 3.7 Mbps per channel — enough for sub-4MP H.265 across all channels at 4 Mbps/channel.
Output (playback)
Sets the ceiling for simultaneous remote playback streams to mobile and web clients.
Installation tips for the WRR-P-E200S2
Install in a standard 19-inch rack cabinet on supported rack rails; allow at least 1U of clearance above and below the 1U for airflow and HDD-bay servicing.
Plan storage at roughly 5400 GB/day (≈162000 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.
Pair with a managed PoE switch sized for the camera plan — choose 802.3at (≤30 W/port) for typical IR-equipped bullets, 802.3bt (≤60-90 W/port) when PTZ or heated housings are in scope.
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 70 W idle and around 70 W under full load (8-bay HDD activity). That dissipates approximately 239 BTU/hour of heat into the rack — size the comms-cabinet ventilation accordingly. Allow 1U of cabinet space for the chassis plus 1U of unobstructed airflow above and below; pair with a UPS sized for at least 15-minute hold-up so the recorder shuts down cleanly on mains failure.
Installer time & cost (rough estimate)
A typical EU integrator quotes 20-22 h of labour to commission the Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2 (approximately €900-€990 excluding hardware), broken down as physical install, HDD population, 128-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 WRR-P-E200S2 record?
Up to 128 IP camera channels per chassis. Total ingest bandwidth is 470 Mbps, which sets the practical ceiling — running every channel at 4K (typically 8 Mbps each) requires 1024 Mbps, so verify whether your camera plan fits inside the bandwidth budget.
Does the Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2 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 WRR-P-E200S2 need for 30-day recording?
At the industry-typical 4 Mbps per channel H.265 CBR (15 fps, 4 MP scene), all 128 channels recording continuously for 30 days produces approximately 162000 GB (158.2 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 WRR-P-E200S2?
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 16 TB per bay across 8 bays = up to 128 TB raw capacity; populate matched pairs/sets if planning RAID.
Does the Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2 need its own PoE switch?
Yes — the recorder has no built-in PoE, so cameras connect through a separate managed PoE switch. Size the switch's PoE budget for the planned cameras: 802.3at (≤30 W/port) handles typical IR-equipped bullets and domes; 802.3bt (≤60-90 W/port) is needed for PTZ and heated housings.
What power and cooling does the Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2 need?
Plan for 70 W idle and ~70 W under full load, dissipating roughly 239 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 WRR-P-E200S2 suitable for evidentiary recording?
Depends on the retention and chain-of-custody policy. The 8-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
Storage Calculator
Match HDD capacity to your retention policy
Bandwidth Calculator
Verify your network can carry the ingest load
Camera Quantity Calculator
Match channel count to your site
UPS Sizing Calculator
Hold-up time for clean NVR shutdown on mains failure
System Budget Estimator
Hardware + install + commissioning cost
CCTV Storage Planning Guide
Bitrate, retention, RAID — the full math
Plan your CCTV layout with Hanwha WRR-P-E200S2
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