Paul Anderegg
July 26th, 2013, 06:52 PM
I bought an x920 last month for under $900 from B&H, and have been so impressed with the quality, I wanted to share my experiences.
I actually purchased an x920 as well as a Sony 710v at the same time, with the idea to test the two side by side and keep the best one. The Sony suffered horrible CA, so it got returned, but the Panasonic had so many other things going for it, the choice was pretty easy.
I am a photog at a local news station, and we air 720-60p. The x920 has become my new "go to" camera for anything in the day. I use a Panasonic SPX800 for anything shot in the dark. The picture quality provided by the x920 was more than I expected. None of our editors are even aware I am shooting my stories on a sub $1000 "handycam"! :D
The best part of the x920 is the manual controls, and how quickly they can be accessed. In breaking news, with perishable shots coming and going right and left, you need to be able to adjust settings within seconds, or you miss the shot. The x920 has a large ring around the lens, and a large "manual selector" button on the left in front of the flip-out LCD. Pushing this button toggles through four ring functions, focus, W/B, shutter, and iris/gain. Focus selects AF/MF, which I rarely use unless I am shooting a face telephoto off center, or want to rack focus off some yellow tape.
The W/B settings are great. You get like 4 standard day and night preset's, which are roughly 3000k, 3200k, 5600k, and 6300k. There are a couple of other ones with icons I don't know for, but you get to set your W/B manually as well. It only takes a few seconds to toggle to this feature, point at white/grey, and you get real W/B. AWB is also provided, but I have found it is only accurate for me in the day, and at night it gets confused around red and blue emergency lights, orange streetlights, and florescent lighting.
Next is the shutter speed. This is best used as a sort of ND filter. I just leave it set at 1/30 all the time since most of my shooting runs into twilight.
Last is the gain/iris. Once I have my W/B and shutter set, this is the only control I need or use while shooting. The large ring acts as an iris until it gets wide open, and then it begins adding gain. Gain is displayed in db, just like a real camera. 3, 5, 9, 12, 15 and 18. While these are displayed, there are actually several gain steps in between, so think of this like the iris display in a pro camera viewfinder. The 18db gain setting does something horrible to the picture. For some reason, that last gain up click looses all color and contrast, and gets soft. The extra 1db or whatever lost by staying at the upper end of the 15db setting is very much preferable.
A usable zebra pattern is also available. Unlike the Sony I tested, it has fine lines, which are not huge diagonal bars. The dynamic range of the camera is pretty good, and I am not afraid to of letting the zebra spread when I need to brighten up my main subject. The dynamic range is about as good as your typical ProSumer cameras. I can shoot a brightly lit convenience store at night and see just as much in the dark parking lot as with my broadcast camera.
Audio was also a pleasant surprise. I read all sorts of reviews about wind noise, and seeing the basic "grill" pointing up, I thought I would be lucky to hear anything other than low flying aircraft. The camera has 5.1 and stereo settings. It also has manual audio controls, with or without AGC. I leave it on stereo turned all the way up with AGC as a limiter. The viewfinder has a working audio level meter, so you can see if the guys voice your interviewing is "pumping" above ambient sounds such as loud fire trucks in the background. I leave the low-cut simply to bring out the voices in SOT's, and the stupid little mics actually work surprisingly well.......not as well as a shotgun, but not what I expected from simple grills pointing upwards.
CHROMATIC ABERATION: What CA......seriously, this camera has none......it's better than my Canon J22x7.6 eifXS lens......i'm not kidding. The lens is so sharp, I won't put a wide angle converter on it for fear or de-sharpening the picture.
What's not to like? I don't like car taillights that look almost orange. I don't like the very slight "rippling" effect I get on edges, the Sony didn't do that. I don't like the "rocking" on a boat effect that I see sometimes, due to the 500 way axis stabilization. I really HATE the zoom, as it goes from creepy crawl to high speed with almost nothing in between. As something approaches you, you can ramp up the zoom to match their approach, you pretty much have to be prepared to select a fixed zoom rate and get used to how to move the lever to get that speed. I don't like that I can only access slower than 1/30 shutter speed by spending 30 seconds going into the menu to select dedicated night mode. I don't like that you loose all sharpness and saturation adjustments when you switch to FULL AUTO mode, which is necessary when you need AWB or such very quickly. I don't like the color fringing on bright white sky when your opened up to see a house or such in the shade. Of all the little gripes, the only one that really is noticeable and irritates me on a daily basis is the zoom issue.
12x zoom is a bit limiting, 20x digital is available. I "downconvert" from 1080-60p to 720-60p, so the loss of resolution in digital zoom is not that big a deal, but you can still see artifacts as the steadyshot manipulates pixels.
The x920 also does passable still photos......it looks pretty to shoot slow speed shutter shots at night, and the steadyshot actually works very well. If you test this camera out, be advised, the steadyshot only goes into full functioning after it begins recording....the shot will actually tighten up as the red light comes on.
Tripod use......ummm......I have laid it on top of my huge Sachtlers tripod plate a few times. It tends to want to look floaty unless locked down and not touched for a few seconds with the steady shot on. With the steadyshot off, breathing slightly anywhere near the camera causes jitter.
All in all, a passable (if your used to JVC 790's!) news camera, with very acceptable picture quality and enough instantly accessible manual control options to keep an experiences shooter from feeling underequipped. Video I shoot with this little camera airs daily on my local network affiliate station, and I wouldn't use the darn thing if it weren't up par. :)
I actually purchased an x920 as well as a Sony 710v at the same time, with the idea to test the two side by side and keep the best one. The Sony suffered horrible CA, so it got returned, but the Panasonic had so many other things going for it, the choice was pretty easy.
I am a photog at a local news station, and we air 720-60p. The x920 has become my new "go to" camera for anything in the day. I use a Panasonic SPX800 for anything shot in the dark. The picture quality provided by the x920 was more than I expected. None of our editors are even aware I am shooting my stories on a sub $1000 "handycam"! :D
The best part of the x920 is the manual controls, and how quickly they can be accessed. In breaking news, with perishable shots coming and going right and left, you need to be able to adjust settings within seconds, or you miss the shot. The x920 has a large ring around the lens, and a large "manual selector" button on the left in front of the flip-out LCD. Pushing this button toggles through four ring functions, focus, W/B, shutter, and iris/gain. Focus selects AF/MF, which I rarely use unless I am shooting a face telephoto off center, or want to rack focus off some yellow tape.
The W/B settings are great. You get like 4 standard day and night preset's, which are roughly 3000k, 3200k, 5600k, and 6300k. There are a couple of other ones with icons I don't know for, but you get to set your W/B manually as well. It only takes a few seconds to toggle to this feature, point at white/grey, and you get real W/B. AWB is also provided, but I have found it is only accurate for me in the day, and at night it gets confused around red and blue emergency lights, orange streetlights, and florescent lighting.
Next is the shutter speed. This is best used as a sort of ND filter. I just leave it set at 1/30 all the time since most of my shooting runs into twilight.
Last is the gain/iris. Once I have my W/B and shutter set, this is the only control I need or use while shooting. The large ring acts as an iris until it gets wide open, and then it begins adding gain. Gain is displayed in db, just like a real camera. 3, 5, 9, 12, 15 and 18. While these are displayed, there are actually several gain steps in between, so think of this like the iris display in a pro camera viewfinder. The 18db gain setting does something horrible to the picture. For some reason, that last gain up click looses all color and contrast, and gets soft. The extra 1db or whatever lost by staying at the upper end of the 15db setting is very much preferable.
A usable zebra pattern is also available. Unlike the Sony I tested, it has fine lines, which are not huge diagonal bars. The dynamic range of the camera is pretty good, and I am not afraid to of letting the zebra spread when I need to brighten up my main subject. The dynamic range is about as good as your typical ProSumer cameras. I can shoot a brightly lit convenience store at night and see just as much in the dark parking lot as with my broadcast camera.
Audio was also a pleasant surprise. I read all sorts of reviews about wind noise, and seeing the basic "grill" pointing up, I thought I would be lucky to hear anything other than low flying aircraft. The camera has 5.1 and stereo settings. It also has manual audio controls, with or without AGC. I leave it on stereo turned all the way up with AGC as a limiter. The viewfinder has a working audio level meter, so you can see if the guys voice your interviewing is "pumping" above ambient sounds such as loud fire trucks in the background. I leave the low-cut simply to bring out the voices in SOT's, and the stupid little mics actually work surprisingly well.......not as well as a shotgun, but not what I expected from simple grills pointing upwards.
CHROMATIC ABERATION: What CA......seriously, this camera has none......it's better than my Canon J22x7.6 eifXS lens......i'm not kidding. The lens is so sharp, I won't put a wide angle converter on it for fear or de-sharpening the picture.
What's not to like? I don't like car taillights that look almost orange. I don't like the very slight "rippling" effect I get on edges, the Sony didn't do that. I don't like the "rocking" on a boat effect that I see sometimes, due to the 500 way axis stabilization. I really HATE the zoom, as it goes from creepy crawl to high speed with almost nothing in between. As something approaches you, you can ramp up the zoom to match their approach, you pretty much have to be prepared to select a fixed zoom rate and get used to how to move the lever to get that speed. I don't like that I can only access slower than 1/30 shutter speed by spending 30 seconds going into the menu to select dedicated night mode. I don't like that you loose all sharpness and saturation adjustments when you switch to FULL AUTO mode, which is necessary when you need AWB or such very quickly. I don't like the color fringing on bright white sky when your opened up to see a house or such in the shade. Of all the little gripes, the only one that really is noticeable and irritates me on a daily basis is the zoom issue.
12x zoom is a bit limiting, 20x digital is available. I "downconvert" from 1080-60p to 720-60p, so the loss of resolution in digital zoom is not that big a deal, but you can still see artifacts as the steadyshot manipulates pixels.
The x920 also does passable still photos......it looks pretty to shoot slow speed shutter shots at night, and the steadyshot actually works very well. If you test this camera out, be advised, the steadyshot only goes into full functioning after it begins recording....the shot will actually tighten up as the red light comes on.
Tripod use......ummm......I have laid it on top of my huge Sachtlers tripod plate a few times. It tends to want to look floaty unless locked down and not touched for a few seconds with the steady shot on. With the steadyshot off, breathing slightly anywhere near the camera causes jitter.
All in all, a passable (if your used to JVC 790's!) news camera, with very acceptable picture quality and enough instantly accessible manual control options to keep an experiences shooter from feeling underequipped. Video I shoot with this little camera airs daily on my local network affiliate station, and I wouldn't use the darn thing if it weren't up par. :)