Timo Lawrence
September 12th, 2012, 04:11 PM
I've been trying to find information about this for awhile but only recently started emailing, making calls, etc.
I'm trying to find either an external recorder, studio recorder, or even a PCIe card that could capture 8bit RGB off of my FS100.
recently I emailed Cinedeck, and they got back to me almost immediately with this reply
"Hi Tim,
They all support 422 recording because no one supports Sony's proprietary 8bit RGB pixel format, including us, unfortunately.
You could possibly use an AJA 'HDMI to dual link' converter and record dual link 4:4:4 to the RX or EX"
A few days later I called abelcine, and the representitive said that the FS100 only supported 4:2:2 output.
I also called AJA, and the representitive at AJA said because it is the live, uncompressed signal out of the HDMI port, it doesn't have any format be that YUV or RGB, 4:2:2 or 4:4:4 that it was all decided on the recording end.
BHphotovideo's page on the FS100 still states
"Uncompressed 4:2:2 & RGB Output via HDMI" as a feature point
BHPhotovideo here
Sony's page however states
"HDMI Output with Embedded Time code for 4:2:2 Uncompressed digital output. For extra convenience when using external recorders, the NEX-FS100 provides an HDMI Output with Embedded Time code and pull down markers Signal Output al Output."
Sony Product Detail Page NEXFS100U (http://pro.sony.com/bbsc/ssr/product-NEXFS100U/)
I've tried contacting Sony directly but I've received no email reply, and when I call their phone line and select "Sony Professional Products" the automated system tells me to go to their website.
Does anyone know for a fact that the FS100 is even capable of a true RGB signal? or would it just be YUV converted to RGB after camera processing.
And if it does, is there ANY product that can capture that RGB signal from HDMI, or losslessly convert it from HDMI to SDI.
every product I've seen from Blackmagic, Atomos, Cinedeck, Cinemartin, AJA. They all only take a 4:2:2 signal.
Let me know if you know otherwise, I'd like to get this settled once and for all, and if it isn't capable, this becomes a matter of false advertising.
Thanks for your time.
I'm trying to find either an external recorder, studio recorder, or even a PCIe card that could capture 8bit RGB off of my FS100.
recently I emailed Cinedeck, and they got back to me almost immediately with this reply
"Hi Tim,
They all support 422 recording because no one supports Sony's proprietary 8bit RGB pixel format, including us, unfortunately.
You could possibly use an AJA 'HDMI to dual link' converter and record dual link 4:4:4 to the RX or EX"
A few days later I called abelcine, and the representitive said that the FS100 only supported 4:2:2 output.
I also called AJA, and the representitive at AJA said because it is the live, uncompressed signal out of the HDMI port, it doesn't have any format be that YUV or RGB, 4:2:2 or 4:4:4 that it was all decided on the recording end.
BHphotovideo's page on the FS100 still states
"Uncompressed 4:2:2 & RGB Output via HDMI" as a feature point
BHPhotovideo here
Sony's page however states
"HDMI Output with Embedded Time code for 4:2:2 Uncompressed digital output. For extra convenience when using external recorders, the NEX-FS100 provides an HDMI Output with Embedded Time code and pull down markers Signal Output al Output."
Sony Product Detail Page NEXFS100U (http://pro.sony.com/bbsc/ssr/product-NEXFS100U/)
I've tried contacting Sony directly but I've received no email reply, and when I call their phone line and select "Sony Professional Products" the automated system tells me to go to their website.
Does anyone know for a fact that the FS100 is even capable of a true RGB signal? or would it just be YUV converted to RGB after camera processing.
And if it does, is there ANY product that can capture that RGB signal from HDMI, or losslessly convert it from HDMI to SDI.
every product I've seen from Blackmagic, Atomos, Cinedeck, Cinemartin, AJA. They all only take a 4:2:2 signal.
Let me know if you know otherwise, I'd like to get this settled once and for all, and if it isn't capable, this becomes a matter of false advertising.
Thanks for your time.