Jamie Hellmich
June 2nd, 2008, 06:16 PM
Added below paragraph before posting:
Sorry to ramble on, but perhaps some other folks like me, that are not professionals (yet?), take great interest in this forum in choosing a camera, and I want to offer my opinion. And, thanks to DVinfo and it's participants, for this soapbox to stand on, and the plethora of information available within these forums.<
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Man, I love my HCI, but this V1U.... it frickin' ROCKS!!!!!!! A tinkerer's dream!
I am so impressed with the detail this camera presents, whether on my PC, via HDMI output or Blu-Ray disk to my plasma. The HDMI output is so sweet for reviewing, as well as trying different settings of the camera. It is an invaluable tool.
Video quality: It presents (to me) an aweome ability to "see what I see", and with 20/20 vision. The HDV at 60i is incredibly clear and detailed, and the camera does a pretty darn good job of setting itself for good shots in auto. The manual camera settings allow complete control of so many variables, I hardly know where to begin. I have much to learn about videography, and I believe I have the tool now to do so.
Low-light performance: Coming the consumer camera route from super-8mm>digital-8>SD mini dv>HDV (HC1), I have no qualms with the "low-light" performance of the V1U. The default "Sunset" profile does a really job good outside, and the "Portrait" profile does pretty good inside. And you can create your own profiles. As well, shutter speed at 30 makes an improvement. I've set the maximum gain at 12db, and have no problem with that. If the shot REALLY needs it and I need to see better... I turn lights on, or put the HVL-20M light I have on hand on it.
Audio: I really miss an on-board stereo mic, and feel a little cheated. I understand the need for shotgun mics, and use a Rode Videomic generously on my HC1. But I do miss the stereo recording and ambient sound of the on-board mic systems I'm used to, for informal shooting inside the house with gatherings of family and friends.
The provided ECM-NV1 shotgun mic is a little "cold" in "auto level", but provides "acceptable" audio for my purposes. I've set the input in "manual" and about level 8 to 9 for normal recording. Just have to watch audio levels, and would definitely go "auto" if the environment calls for it. I will eventually upgrade the mic, and can use the Rode which sounds great.
Wide angle: Knowing I'd need it/want it, I got the VCL-HG0862K wide angle lens. What a piece of camera furniture! You just can't beat Sony quality. It adds just enough wide for me with minimal vertical distortion at the wide end, and allows full zoom with perfect clarity. The bayonet style connection sure beats the crap out of threads, and what a lens hood! A+ on this one.
Form factor and usability: Very, very nice.
Progressive scan: Man, I spent many, many hours scouring DV Info subforms and threads trying to establish what format I "needed" to shoot my new V1U in. Getting confused, insecure, unsure and undecided, I shot identical scenes in 24p, 30p and 60i. I captured and rendered these clips in Vegas to every stinking template I could come up with, along with customizing some. 24p shot and rendered to 24p was too jerky, I reckon it's okay with still shots and slow moving people.
30p looked pretty good in SD DVD, and really good in 720p, but not sure it looked good in 1080i. Granted, I am a novice and have a ton to learn. But you know... when rendered for SD DVD, PC playback, PS3 playback, or to Blu-Ray disk, I'll be dad-gummed if the 60i HDV shot stuff didn't look best to me. Just my take on "progressive" for now.
Meantime... I'm gonna burn up some tape and have fun with this awesome camera. I already have a pretty good church project to work on, some ideas for a couple of short films/documentaries, and boy is the family gonna get tired of me and my V1U/1 (by the way, what does the "/1" on the box mean?)
Folks, if you are looking to buy or upgrade to a "pro-type" and great camera that can shoot wonderfully in auto, or want to tinker with settings till the cows come home... the V1U could be your perfect choice.
Jamie
Sorry to ramble on, but perhaps some other folks like me, that are not professionals (yet?), take great interest in this forum in choosing a camera, and I want to offer my opinion. And, thanks to DVinfo and it's participants, for this soapbox to stand on, and the plethora of information available within these forums.<
______________________________________________________________
Man, I love my HCI, but this V1U.... it frickin' ROCKS!!!!!!! A tinkerer's dream!
I am so impressed with the detail this camera presents, whether on my PC, via HDMI output or Blu-Ray disk to my plasma. The HDMI output is so sweet for reviewing, as well as trying different settings of the camera. It is an invaluable tool.
Video quality: It presents (to me) an aweome ability to "see what I see", and with 20/20 vision. The HDV at 60i is incredibly clear and detailed, and the camera does a pretty darn good job of setting itself for good shots in auto. The manual camera settings allow complete control of so many variables, I hardly know where to begin. I have much to learn about videography, and I believe I have the tool now to do so.
Low-light performance: Coming the consumer camera route from super-8mm>digital-8>SD mini dv>HDV (HC1), I have no qualms with the "low-light" performance of the V1U. The default "Sunset" profile does a really job good outside, and the "Portrait" profile does pretty good inside. And you can create your own profiles. As well, shutter speed at 30 makes an improvement. I've set the maximum gain at 12db, and have no problem with that. If the shot REALLY needs it and I need to see better... I turn lights on, or put the HVL-20M light I have on hand on it.
Audio: I really miss an on-board stereo mic, and feel a little cheated. I understand the need for shotgun mics, and use a Rode Videomic generously on my HC1. But I do miss the stereo recording and ambient sound of the on-board mic systems I'm used to, for informal shooting inside the house with gatherings of family and friends.
The provided ECM-NV1 shotgun mic is a little "cold" in "auto level", but provides "acceptable" audio for my purposes. I've set the input in "manual" and about level 8 to 9 for normal recording. Just have to watch audio levels, and would definitely go "auto" if the environment calls for it. I will eventually upgrade the mic, and can use the Rode which sounds great.
Wide angle: Knowing I'd need it/want it, I got the VCL-HG0862K wide angle lens. What a piece of camera furniture! You just can't beat Sony quality. It adds just enough wide for me with minimal vertical distortion at the wide end, and allows full zoom with perfect clarity. The bayonet style connection sure beats the crap out of threads, and what a lens hood! A+ on this one.
Form factor and usability: Very, very nice.
Progressive scan: Man, I spent many, many hours scouring DV Info subforms and threads trying to establish what format I "needed" to shoot my new V1U in. Getting confused, insecure, unsure and undecided, I shot identical scenes in 24p, 30p and 60i. I captured and rendered these clips in Vegas to every stinking template I could come up with, along with customizing some. 24p shot and rendered to 24p was too jerky, I reckon it's okay with still shots and slow moving people.
30p looked pretty good in SD DVD, and really good in 720p, but not sure it looked good in 1080i. Granted, I am a novice and have a ton to learn. But you know... when rendered for SD DVD, PC playback, PS3 playback, or to Blu-Ray disk, I'll be dad-gummed if the 60i HDV shot stuff didn't look best to me. Just my take on "progressive" for now.
Meantime... I'm gonna burn up some tape and have fun with this awesome camera. I already have a pretty good church project to work on, some ideas for a couple of short films/documentaries, and boy is the family gonna get tired of me and my V1U/1 (by the way, what does the "/1" on the box mean?)
Folks, if you are looking to buy or upgrade to a "pro-type" and great camera that can shoot wonderfully in auto, or want to tinker with settings till the cows come home... the V1U could be your perfect choice.
Jamie