Marty Hudzik
April 23rd, 2007, 08:15 AM
I own a Canon XL-H1 and an HV20. Obviously the HV20 is intended to be used as a VCR primarily and a home movie type of camera whenever possible. Here is my issuse.
Dropouts. Plain and simple. Well....not so simple.
You see, tapes I have recorded in the H1 have dropouts frequently when playing on the HV20. We are talking on the magnitude of 7-8 in a 15 Minute span. However rewinding and playing back they do not occur in the same spots. It is a spontaneous playback glitch. The tape is fine when played back in the XLH1 but when in the HV20 it seems to have problems regularly.
This also happens to tapes that are recorded in the HV20. I shot 7 minutes at my nephews bowl-a-thon for charity and there were at least 8 dropouts when viewing from the HDMI port to LCD. Playing it back again they are always in slightly different spots.
I then proceeded to capture this using Cineform and there were only 2 places where a dropout occurred. I lost 1-2 seconds and the clips that this occurred on were split in half. Going back and vieweing these sections on the tape show no droputs and recapturing them is fine. The problem here is that I want reliable capture of my footage....not split scenes and lost seconds of clips all the time.
I ran a head cleaner through the unit as soon as I got it but so far it still seems somewhat unreliable.
Dropouts. Plain and simple. Well....not so simple.
You see, tapes I have recorded in the H1 have dropouts frequently when playing on the HV20. We are talking on the magnitude of 7-8 in a 15 Minute span. However rewinding and playing back they do not occur in the same spots. It is a spontaneous playback glitch. The tape is fine when played back in the XLH1 but when in the HV20 it seems to have problems regularly.
This also happens to tapes that are recorded in the HV20. I shot 7 minutes at my nephews bowl-a-thon for charity and there were at least 8 dropouts when viewing from the HDMI port to LCD. Playing it back again they are always in slightly different spots.
I then proceeded to capture this using Cineform and there were only 2 places where a dropout occurred. I lost 1-2 seconds and the clips that this occurred on were split in half. Going back and vieweing these sections on the tape show no droputs and recapturing them is fine. The problem here is that I want reliable capture of my footage....not split scenes and lost seconds of clips all the time.
I ran a head cleaner through the unit as soon as I got it but so far it still seems somewhat unreliable.