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XL H1 or Sony HVR-Z7E
Hi everyone I am considering purchasing my third camera, I currently own a canon XH A1 and a Sony PD 150.
Right now I am looking at the two options XL H1 or Sony HVR-Z7E. I am digging around for info own both these cameras. Anybody out there who has used these cameras can you tell me the pros and cons. Thank you for your help guys. |
I too am considering one of these cams to supplement my XHA1.
Was also seriously looking into the Z7U, but there are reports on this site of focusing and CF recording issues, sounds like it may not be reliable for event use. That's a shame because it negates, to a large extent, the other cool features of the Sony. I am not sure if these same issues are present in the S270U, although I would hope not. The current XLH1 does not, as far as I have heard, have any such focusing or other lense issues, so it may be the more reliable cam. Personally, I am leaning more towards just getting a second Canon, either the XLH1 or XHA1. They are still great little cams. I think I would trust them more than the Sony Z7U at this point. |
It really depends on what you are planning on using the camera for. The fact that ths Z7 has tape AND card record makes it a much better deal imho.
I want fast transfer to NLE & cheap archive. Z7 is the only camera that comes standard w/ that. Otherwise you have to buy some third party hard drive & camera mount. If you can wait a few months & don't need the jack pack then get the XL-H1a. Same cost as Z7, plus it will play better w/ your XH-A1 (according to Canon @ NAB) b/c it has the same 'guts' & you can match the two camera settings perfectly w/ a quick swipe of a memory card. Also, the new Canons ship w/ a 20x lens, compared to the Sony 12x lens. This could be a deal breaker for some, but w/ the Sony using a more standard lens mount, it will be easier to find other lenses to use. I know there are people having trouble w/ the Sony lens, but I couldn't reproduce the problem at NAB w/ their cameras on display, so I think it is a random issue & if you get a camera w/ a bad lens, it will be under warranty & easy to exchange. Also the CF card issue seems to be happening when people use cheaper CF cards. All I can say to that is if you have $6k to spend on a camera & $.06 to spend on the extras, you should be buying a cheaper camera. It takes a LOT more power to record video than it does to record still pics. So a card that works 'fine' in a DSLR could easily have trouble in a HD video camera. |
I'm a current Sony HC1 owner looking to upgrade, but the cameras being discussed in this thread are a bit out of my price range. However, something did catch my eye as I read through this:
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I'm interested in being able to take advantage of having two nice cameras (the next camera I'm thinking to get will be the XH-A1). But I know there's a lot involved with being able to record with two cameras on the same shoot if they are different. This seems pretty cool though. It might not be something I can do with my next purchase (because I will have an XH-A1 and a HC1), but the purchase after that maybe. |
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You cannot sync XL-H1 and XH-A1/G1 custom profiles. You can clone them with a tool to get almost the same look out of both cameras.
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hmm.. ok, I think I get it. Thanks for the responses guys.
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Do you know where to download this tool? Thanks |
I haven't seen the Z7 but like what I read about it. I also like what I read about the new Canon upgrades. I have an XH A1 and am quite happy with it. The only advantage I can see to the Sony over the new similarly priced Canon is that the Sony's 24p footage would, presumably, play back on any Sony HDV deck. This would be important if you're in a production studio. Not so important if you shoot for yourself and edit your own footage.
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The tool: http://www.felixtheissen.com/apps/We...and%20win.html |
I am using the Sony Z7E (Pal version) and so far I am very pleased !!
I know there are some serious probles with the stock lens as you can read on the Sony Z7 forum, however, I mostly use it with a Nikon 80-200 f2.8 still lens and it works like a dream. Focusing is easy with the 'Peaking' function and high resolution LCD and viewfinder. Exposure control can't be easier with a histogram displayed on the LCD and viewfinder. It records 1080i 25p to both tape and CF cards. I have no experience with other cameras and I am very new to this business so this should be kept in mind. |
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