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Old 06-14-2008, 04:05 PM
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Default Which video camera?

Ok I will be honest I have had a video camera before but I am a complete novice. I am looking at getting a new camera and have pretty much chosen the canon HV30, does anyone have experience of it and is it an ideal stock video camera?
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Old 06-16-2008, 01:40 PM
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I have the HV30 and it is great for stock. Get a few lights and you are set, Oh don't forget a good fluid head tripod. Its a great camera and the picture quality is awesome.
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Old 06-20-2008, 12:40 PM
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The Velbon 7000 seems to be the Tripod a lot of video people go with. I have heard of people still buying the HV20 because the deals are pretty good on it.
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Old 07-17-2008, 10:44 AM
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I've just gone for the Canon HG10 because it has a Hard Disk Drive. The option of not having to wait for tapes to whizz backwards and forwards seemed a positive step.

Only had it a week or two and haven't had time to play with it much yet, but I'm impressed so far.
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Old 08-07-2008, 02:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jimiking View Post
I've just gone for the Canon HG10 because it has a Hard Disk Drive. The option of not having to wait for tapes to whizz backwards and forwards seemed a positive step.

Only had it a week or two and haven't had time to play with it much yet, but I'm impressed so far.
How's the camera with the hard drive working out? I've read that dumping the files is something that detracts as far as some people are concerned. Also backups on tape are made, as you crate the video. (although I've had tape spaghetti with all kinds of recorders, so it's not perfect) I'm not sure about video quality, something about transfer rates to the recorder.

On the other side, if I was doing a time lapse, I'd much rather have a hard drive start and stop, not a tape. Dumping to DVD is find for saving things, if you aren't out in the field, where tape wins. If they made a removable drive, that would be the hot setup.

Recording direct to DVD? Nah, not interested.

Recording to memory cards, is the real answer, which is probably a couple more years down the road. !G cards in pro camera have come down to about $1000 each. Major stopper right there.

Meanwhile back at the question. How's the hard drive camera working out for you? Somehow not having fragile tapes, is tempting. Running out of space and not being able to pop in some new media, bothers me.
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Old 08-07-2008, 06:21 PM
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Enjoying the HDD bit and can't see any problems with quality etc, although I haven't got a tape alternative to compare it to. As far as capacity goes, you can record up to 5 hours 30 minutes at the highest quality before you have to transfer the files to a PC. That's more than enough for my needs.

Haven't got my head around converting or editing M2TS files into something that iStock will accept yet though. I guess they'll be the ultimate test. When I find a way of doing that I'll let you know how I get on.
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