Adrian Gonzalez
February 18th, 2007, 12:11 AM
I received my first HD110 about 2 weeks ago and fell in love with it right away. Unfortunately, after a few hours of use I noticed that there were many dead pixels (white dots), particularly in slow shutter speeds, even with the gain set to 0db. I contacted JVC and they suggested that I run the Pixel Compensation feature in the service menu. I ran the Pixel Compensation several times (after letting the camera warm up), and while the large dots disappeared, there were still many smaller dots visible. The rep at JVC said that the camera probably had a defective CCD and should be replaced. JVC offered to replace the camera, but since it was only a couple days old, I contacted the dealer and they sent me a new HD110.
Now, I’m on my second, brand-new HD110 and unfortunately I still have a problem with dead pixels. After this camera warms up for 15 minutes I can see the dead pixels when shooting at 1/6, 1/12 and depending on the subject and lighting at 1/24 shutter speeds. At faster shutter speeds the problem disappears, unless I need to use some gain.
So, am I just unlucky and need to get this camera replaced again? Or do all other HD110’s behave the same way? If my camera is behaving normally, what’s the trick to getting rid of these little white dots? Do I need to warm up my camera in a microwave oven and run Pixel Compensation 50 times?
I’ve attached a file that shows the dead pixels. It was shot at 1/6 sec. shutter with the aperture closed and 0db gain. As you open the aperture, the dots become even more visible. To rule out problems with the display, I’ve tested this on several monitors ranging from a 23” LCD to a 42” plasma. The bigger the monitor the worse the problem becomes.
Now, I’m on my second, brand-new HD110 and unfortunately I still have a problem with dead pixels. After this camera warms up for 15 minutes I can see the dead pixels when shooting at 1/6, 1/12 and depending on the subject and lighting at 1/24 shutter speeds. At faster shutter speeds the problem disappears, unless I need to use some gain.
So, am I just unlucky and need to get this camera replaced again? Or do all other HD110’s behave the same way? If my camera is behaving normally, what’s the trick to getting rid of these little white dots? Do I need to warm up my camera in a microwave oven and run Pixel Compensation 50 times?
I’ve attached a file that shows the dead pixels. It was shot at 1/6 sec. shutter with the aperture closed and 0db gain. As you open the aperture, the dots become even more visible. To rule out problems with the display, I’ve tested this on several monitors ranging from a 23” LCD to a 42” plasma. The bigger the monitor the worse the problem becomes.