Salar Ghazi
January 15th, 2007, 03:01 PM
Hello,
Iwant to buy a Canon A1 in March, but I am a little bit worried of buying a "bad batch".
Here is the explanation of what I mean:
When I bought my first cam, a PD 150, there was a vignetting of the image. It looked like a bad lens, but was electronical. The camera was of course replaced immediately, but the scanner of the replaced camera (i.e the video drum) was much louder.
The pro-company from which I bought the camera was kind to replace the camera again, but the scanner was still louder than the original one. We even tried to track down the original camera at Sony to have it repaired and not replaced but were not lucky.
I took the second replacement to a film school and compared it to older batches of the PD 150, they also were a bit quieter.
But this could also have been the effect of the drum being "smoothed" during a two year use.
Something similar happened, when i bought a DVX-100.
I was lucky to choose between two brand new DVX on the day of the purchase.
I tested them both. The OIS of the Panasonic tends to make a jump, when you make a slow pan. But on one camera, this effect happend more than on the other cam.
I did not look on the serial number but it would have been intersting wether the DVX left the assembly line the same day / week /month.
Somebody told me, that on the prosumer level, cams are not so often controlled when being assembled, maybe only one is being checked from a batch of a thousand, as far as I can remember. So a batch can have differences in performance.
Because I will probably buy my Canon from a consumer shop, there will be no possibilities for testing an choosing "the better one".
So, here is my question:
Did anybody buy several A1 or several G1 at once and notice differences betweem the individual cams? (mechanical noise, picture quality, chromatic abberation etc.)
I do not mean obvious flaws...
Another question:
On the A1, the recording level can not be adjusted for each channel individually.
When shooting with my DVX, i always record in mono and achieve a stereo effect from the mono sources (especially atmospheres, which can be recorded A/B)
Normally, I record with one channel at letīs say almost 0 db headrom, the other at -18db as a safety in order to prevent distortion, using a mono field mixer or sometimes plugging the Mic in directly.
On the DVX, the channels can be controlled individually for doing this, but on the A1...?
Maybe a fixed resistor in the Audio cable would help to achieve this two level recording on the A1 as described? Any Ideas?
Greetings from Berlin,
Salar
Iwant to buy a Canon A1 in March, but I am a little bit worried of buying a "bad batch".
Here is the explanation of what I mean:
When I bought my first cam, a PD 150, there was a vignetting of the image. It looked like a bad lens, but was electronical. The camera was of course replaced immediately, but the scanner of the replaced camera (i.e the video drum) was much louder.
The pro-company from which I bought the camera was kind to replace the camera again, but the scanner was still louder than the original one. We even tried to track down the original camera at Sony to have it repaired and not replaced but were not lucky.
I took the second replacement to a film school and compared it to older batches of the PD 150, they also were a bit quieter.
But this could also have been the effect of the drum being "smoothed" during a two year use.
Something similar happened, when i bought a DVX-100.
I was lucky to choose between two brand new DVX on the day of the purchase.
I tested them both. The OIS of the Panasonic tends to make a jump, when you make a slow pan. But on one camera, this effect happend more than on the other cam.
I did not look on the serial number but it would have been intersting wether the DVX left the assembly line the same day / week /month.
Somebody told me, that on the prosumer level, cams are not so often controlled when being assembled, maybe only one is being checked from a batch of a thousand, as far as I can remember. So a batch can have differences in performance.
Because I will probably buy my Canon from a consumer shop, there will be no possibilities for testing an choosing "the better one".
So, here is my question:
Did anybody buy several A1 or several G1 at once and notice differences betweem the individual cams? (mechanical noise, picture quality, chromatic abberation etc.)
I do not mean obvious flaws...
Another question:
On the A1, the recording level can not be adjusted for each channel individually.
When shooting with my DVX, i always record in mono and achieve a stereo effect from the mono sources (especially atmospheres, which can be recorded A/B)
Normally, I record with one channel at letīs say almost 0 db headrom, the other at -18db as a safety in order to prevent distortion, using a mono field mixer or sometimes plugging the Mic in directly.
On the DVX, the channels can be controlled individually for doing this, but on the A1...?
Maybe a fixed resistor in the Audio cable would help to achieve this two level recording on the A1 as described? Any Ideas?
Greetings from Berlin,
Salar