View Full Version : Not happy with FS700 ergonomics
David Heath July 19th, 2012, 06:16 AM You must evaluate the total cost of ownership. To disregard that info is naive. Total cost must include everything needed to make a functioning system and not just the camera body.
Fully agreed.
Since a S35 camera will not be able to use existing ENG lenses without expensive adapters or you have to purchase the right PL lens for the job you can't ignore those costs.
I think you may be misunderstanding what is being asked for. It's not to make an s35 camera behave like an ENG camera in terms of long reach servo lenses etc, but just to make it more ergonomic to hand hold.
I gave the example of a PMW320 as compared to a EX1. Fundamentally very similar in terms of the technology, very different for ergonomics. That's what being asked for here. In principle using the same lens as an owner would get for a FS700. Yes, "a S35 coverage ENG style zoom lens matching the quality/performance of a good 2/3" lens" would be nice, but yes, it would be expensive.
Following on from your point about total ownership, then whilst such a body may be dearer than an FS700, it would save the cost of extra mountings - the total cost then may not be much higher.
Chris Medico July 19th, 2012, 06:33 AM I'm not thrilled with the ergonomics of the FS line of cameras myself. Once they get this small there is limited real estate to put all the buttons. I'm not exactly thrilled with the ergo of my F3 either but in my opinion it is better than the FS cameras.
What form factor/design would work better (I'm asking seriously and not to be adversarial). How would you design it if you were given a clean slate to work from?
Svein Rune Skilnand July 19th, 2012, 07:59 AM My dreamcamera would actually be an FS700 in an EX1R housing. Reliable SxS media, fantastic handgrip, lightweight and I love the placement of the LCD screen. For documentary style shooting anyway.
If the EX1 had the same DOF, I probably would`nt look any further.
Mike Marriage July 19th, 2012, 08:05 AM What form factor/design would work better (I'm asking seriously and not to be adversarial). How would you design it if you were given a clean slate to work from?
The JVC GY-HM700 is, in my opinion, the best camera available in regards ergonomics. It is small and light. It is effortless on the shoulder, on the hip, on a tripod or other grip equipment.
I would prefer a better EVF and monitor and would be happy to pay extra for them. A few additional mounting points would also be good to add monitors, rods, handgrips etc..
It's not perfect, but for that price bracket, I think it does exceptionally well.
Jon Springer July 19th, 2012, 05:30 PM I had a good talk with someone inside Sony today and based on that conversation the probability of a large imager ENG style camera below $25k (body only) from Sony is near zero. They acknowledged the request has been heard but responded that a S35 imager ENG camera wasn't practical. Especially under $20-25k.
Chris, I think you're misunderstanding the concept...sorry, it's probably my fault. I am not talking about engineering a fully functional ENG camera with an S35 sensor; I'm talking about engineering an S35 camera body with an ENG form factor. It may be the way I'm using the word ENG that is causing the confusion here...so I will just say shoulder-mounted form factor instead.
This would simply mean putting large sensor technology into a shoulder mounted body (as opposed to a palmcorder/plastic brick) body, all other things being equal. Making the body shoulder-mounted from the get-go would save camera buyers a fortune on the 3rd party accessories that are designed to "make" these cameras shoulder-mounted.
I really don't see how this would be impractical for the camera manufacturers. I do see how the Zacuto's and Red Rock's of this world wouldn't be too happy about it, though. They are making a fortune offering cumbersome, expensive and sometimes absurd camera rigs because of the abysmal ergonomics of these cameras.
http://www.zacuto.com/C300/studio_rig300x199_.jpg
Shooting is hard enough without having to deal with this kind of nonsense.
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Jon Springer July 19th, 2012, 05:49 PM I know the shoulder mount is available on it's own, but it's ridiculously over engineered and I didn't find the camera particularly stable on it due to the sliding camera mounting plate and small mounting surface area. Not sure who designs half this stuff but it doesn't appear to be camera operators. LW15 to optical axis is only 85mm. The FS700 is 55mm from the lens axis to the base, so the shoulder mount only needs to be 45mm tall.
This one (link below) actually looks like a fairly no-nonsense, straightforward design. They claim is gives your C300 the balance of an Arri SR3. It would be interesting to see the FS700 mounted on there...
CINOFLEX type-C300 (http://canoflex.com/)
Jon Springer July 19th, 2012, 06:12 PM The JVC GY-HM700 is, in my opinion, the best camera available in regards ergonomics. It is small and light. It is effortless on the shoulder, on the hip, on a tripod or other grip equipment.
Exactly. An HM700 body with an S35 sensor. Compact, lightweight, balances well on and off the tripod. JVC should go for it.
Bill Bruner July 20th, 2012, 07:30 AM Mike and Jon - exactly - a large sensor and interchangeable lenses in a "shoulder-mounted form factor" is all I want. Not a full-up ENG camera.
Bill
Alister Chapman July 20th, 2012, 12:26 PM But that's not a shoulder mount Jon. It's just a flat slab with a few connectors and a battery plate.Like I said, really not sure who comes up with some of this stuff but it doesn't appear to be end users or real shooters.
Jon Springer July 20th, 2012, 12:51 PM But that's not a shoulder mount Jon. It's just a flat slab with a few connectors and a battery plate.
Actually, yes it is. Here's a better image...it comes with a shoulder pad and grips...
http://www.dslrnewsshooter.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/canoflex001.jpg
...and guess what? It only costs 5K!
Canoflex Type C300 Cinema Base For The Canon C300 Camera. Quick Take Video. Wide Open Camera - YouTube
Like I said, really not sure who comes up with some of this stuff but it doesn't appear to be end users or real shooters.
I totally agree. But it is the camera buyers who are ultimately creating this huge demand for sub-par ergonomics in cameras and in 3rd party camera solutions.
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Mike Marriage July 20th, 2012, 05:18 PM But it is the camera buyers who are ultimately creating this huge demand for sub-par ergonomics in cameras and in 3rd party camera solutions.
EXACTLY! The point of this post in a nutshell: Don't buy into these substandard ergonomics and the manufacturers will be forced to deliver something better.
Jon Springer July 25th, 2012, 03:36 PM What form factor/design would work better (I'm asking seriously and not to be adversarial). How would you design it if you were given a clean slate to work from?
Here...I sketched out a concept design for an S35 shoulder mounted camera. Everyone feel free to comment on the design and contribute your thoughts about the ergonomics and functionality you would like to see on this camera...
http://i1009.photobucket.com/albums/af217/table30/s35concept.jpg
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