Toby Younis
August 20th, 2011, 11:03 AM
I just saw a video at Video University. They were reviewing one of the Pansonic HDSLRs. He said that one of the benefits of the camera is that it recorded video in AVCHD format, and then said that one of the benefits of AVCHD was that the camera didn't experience the overheating problems that other HDSLR's do.
I have considered HDSLR, but have not made the jump since two issues I face are:
1. I shoot documentary interviews. I shoot the interview twice in each sitting, so they're usually in the 20-30 minute range, sometimes longer. It wouldn't be a good idea to interrupt the interview so the camera could cool.
2. I produce two half hour TV programs. We only get a limited amount of time in the Public Access studio, so we'll shoot two to three episodes in a single sitting. I have to set up an overhead camera that I can't touch until after the shoot is completed (I use a JVC Everio 3CCD with a 60 GB Hard Drive).
Now to my question. Why would recording AVCHD onto an HDSLR produce less heat than other recording formats?
Regards,
Toby
I have considered HDSLR, but have not made the jump since two issues I face are:
1. I shoot documentary interviews. I shoot the interview twice in each sitting, so they're usually in the 20-30 minute range, sometimes longer. It wouldn't be a good idea to interrupt the interview so the camera could cool.
2. I produce two half hour TV programs. We only get a limited amount of time in the Public Access studio, so we'll shoot two to three episodes in a single sitting. I have to set up an overhead camera that I can't touch until after the shoot is completed (I use a JVC Everio 3CCD with a 60 GB Hard Drive).
Now to my question. Why would recording AVCHD onto an HDSLR produce less heat than other recording formats?
Regards,
Toby