Arnaldo Paixao
August 11th, 2004, 10:51 AM
Hi all.
Shooting weddings with an XL1s, I was looking for a second camera to serve as backup camera, should my main camera fail, and to be used also as a capture deck so, not so many hours of work are put into the XL1s.
First thought, buy a "cheapie" MiniDV camera. Drawbacks: I would be putting my precious wedding tapes in a cheap mechanism, slow to rewind, as a backup camera the image quality would be far from the main camera and, I would have to buy extra batteries to be able to shoot an entire wedding, should the XL1s fail at the begining. I've had my share of ocasions where I ended up spending not so little money and not beeing serverd wright.
So, I looked at the used equipment adds for something more close to the "pro" side of things. And, there it was, an XM1(GL1) for sale. Phoned, the price was ok, and to me that camera had an extra thing in its favor: I could use the same batteries as the XL1s.
We met, I tested the camera, recorded a bit, captured that into the laptop, everything a OK.
Well, not exactly. At home, connected it to a monitor, and (feeling a shiver down my spine) there they were, the DEAD PIXELS. Yes and they were two. One more visible, down below the safe zone, and another less visible in the middle of the screen.
But I tested the camera! How could that be??? Well my friends, they are very dificult, if not impossible, to see on the viewfinder or on the LCD. Lesson: Always test with a monitor.
Called the fellow, and was lucky enough for him to show up, aknowledge the problem, and give me my money back.
Part II will follow tomorrow.
Best regards,
Arnaldo
Shooting weddings with an XL1s, I was looking for a second camera to serve as backup camera, should my main camera fail, and to be used also as a capture deck so, not so many hours of work are put into the XL1s.
First thought, buy a "cheapie" MiniDV camera. Drawbacks: I would be putting my precious wedding tapes in a cheap mechanism, slow to rewind, as a backup camera the image quality would be far from the main camera and, I would have to buy extra batteries to be able to shoot an entire wedding, should the XL1s fail at the begining. I've had my share of ocasions where I ended up spending not so little money and not beeing serverd wright.
So, I looked at the used equipment adds for something more close to the "pro" side of things. And, there it was, an XM1(GL1) for sale. Phoned, the price was ok, and to me that camera had an extra thing in its favor: I could use the same batteries as the XL1s.
We met, I tested the camera, recorded a bit, captured that into the laptop, everything a OK.
Well, not exactly. At home, connected it to a monitor, and (feeling a shiver down my spine) there they were, the DEAD PIXELS. Yes and they were two. One more visible, down below the safe zone, and another less visible in the middle of the screen.
But I tested the camera! How could that be??? Well my friends, they are very dificult, if not impossible, to see on the viewfinder or on the LCD. Lesson: Always test with a monitor.
Called the fellow, and was lucky enough for him to show up, aknowledge the problem, and give me my money back.
Part II will follow tomorrow.
Best regards,
Arnaldo