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| UK Digital Video (uk.rec.video.digital) For the discussion of all aspects of digital video, including all digital video formats, camera use, editing, post production & all associated equipment, hardware and software. Advertising is prohibited. |
| Tags: 3ccd , panasonic , sony |
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#1
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| I have been looking for a new camcorder; I quite like the sony HC90 which strongly features 'true widescreen' as its major selling feature (to me), but I have since found out that the new 3ccd panasonic cameras may be cheaper. My question is simple (!) Do the new 3ccd panasonic cameras offer a real increase in quality over single ccd, and if so what is the real problem with not having true widescreen. |
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#2
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| LHW wrote: I have been looking for a new camcorder; I quite like the sony HC90 which strongly features 'true widescreen' as its major selling feature (to me), but I have since found out that the new 3ccd panasonic cameras may be cheaper. My question is simple (!) Do the new 3ccd panasonic cameras offer a real increase in quality over single ccd, and if so what is the real problem with not having true widescreen. 3 Chips and true widescreen are essentially two issues but linked by the fact that you are more likely to find true widescreen in a camera that has 3 chips. If that makes sense!? To answer your first question 3 chips will significantly increase picture quality over a single chip camera using comparable lenses and media. Manufacturers use a number of methods to create widescreen images with their 4:3 chips. The easiest way is to use all of the chip in 4:3 mode, thus giving you decent picture resolution in both directions, but to then use the middle portion of the chip for 16:9 shooting. This significantly reduces the vertical resolution of the picture when you shoot 16:9. An example would be the Sony PD150. A stock camera in the early days of 'video diary' type programming and the both the BBC and ITV will broadcast 4:3 material shot on it. However neither of them will broadcast 16:9 material from a PD150 due to the drop in vertical resolution. The second method manufacturers use is to create a chip that is big enough for full resolution images at 16:9 and then use the middle bit of it for shooting 4:3. This means that in both aspect ratios you get full horizontal and vertical resolution. The downside is that they have to make a bigger chip, the cost of which they pass on to you. An example of this solution is the Sony PDX10. This camera actually has a chip larger* than is neccessary for shooting 16:9. At full stretch it'll let you take a 1 megapixel still. A slightly smaller area of the chip is used to film in 16:9, and a smaller area still is used for 4:3. One of the interesting side effects is that when you shoot in 16:9 you actually get a wider angle of view. By the way I don't work for Sony! Essentially how many chips a camera has, and how the camera acquires a 16:9 image is related very closely to cost, and how much you are prepared to spend depends very much on how important image quality is to you and your audience. No-one in your family will tut at your edit of their wedding video because the vertical resolution is less than optimum. They won't notice, they won't care. If you're going to run to the expense of a 3 chip camera though you really should make sure it's one that'll handle 16:9 properly as the main jump in cost really comes with the addition of 2 chips. *when I say larger i mean on a pixel by pixel basis and not necessarily the actual physical size! |
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#3
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| On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 18:12:20 +0000 (UTC), Rich wrote: An example of this solution is the Sony PDX10. This camera actually has a chip larger* than is neccessary for shooting 16:9. At full stretch it'll let you take a 1 megapixel still. A slightly smaller area of the chip is used to film in 16:9, and a smaller area still is used for 4:3. One of the interesting side effects is that when you shoot in 16:9 you actually get a wider angle of view. I have posted this link before but it does illustrate well how the PDX10p works http://www.creativevideo.co.uk/pages...dx10p-16x9.htm Stuart www.mckears.com www.oldfart.tv - have your say about the state of UK Television |
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#4
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| "LHW" wrote in message m... I have been looking for a new camcorder; I quite like the sony HC90 which strongly features 'true widescreen' as its major selling feature (to me), but I have since found out that the new 3ccd panasonic cameras may be cheaper. My question is simple (!) Do the new 3ccd panasonic cameras offer a real increase in quality over single ccd, and if so what is the real problem with not having true widescreen. Read in one of the reviews of the camera that it has poor low light performance which was put down to the Panasonic having 3 chips. |
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#5
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| Stuart McKears wrote in message . .. On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 18:12:20 +0000 (UTC), Rich wrote: An example of this solution is the Sony PDX10. This camera actually has a chip larger* than is neccessary for shooting 16:9. At full stretch it'll let you take a 1 megapixel still. A slightly smaller area of the chip is used to film in 16:9, and a smaller area still is used for 4:3. One of the interesting side effects is that when you shoot in 16:9 you actually get a wider angle of view. I have posted this link before but it does illustrate well how the PDX10p works http://www.creativevideo.co.uk/pages...dx10p-16x9.htm Stuart www.mckears.com www.oldfart.tv - have your say about the state of UK Television Thanks for the information so far. This then leads me to the question of How the new panasonic 3ccd cameras (150, 250,400) manage their widescreen mode. Does anybody know ? |
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#6
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| informer wrote: "LHW" wrote in message m... I have been looking for a new camcorder; I quite like the sony HC90 which strongly features 'true widescreen' as its major selling feature (to me), but I have since found out that the new 3ccd panasonic cameras may be cheaper. My question is simple (!) Do the new 3ccd panasonic cameras offer a real increase in quality over single ccd, and if so what is the real problem with not having true widescreen. Read in one of the reviews of the camera that it has poor low light performance which was put down to the Panasonic having 3 chips. I don't know that having 3 chips would cause it to function worse in low light. That's more likely to be down to bad design, or a bad choice for the 3 chips. Personally I wouldn't go for a Panasonic camera. Sony or Ikegami for Broadcast works, Sony or JVC for Semi-Pro. The Canon XL range is nice to but hugely overpriced. |
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#7
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| "Rich" wrote Personally I wouldn't go for a Panasonic camera. Sony or Ikegami for Broadcast works, Sony or JVC for Semi-Pro. The Canon XL range is nice to but hugely overpriced. Can't see why anyone would want to buy a non true wide screen camcorder seeing that most TV's are now widescreen. |
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