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July 27th, 2009, 02:20 AM | #31 | |
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July 27th, 2009, 02:26 AM | #32 |
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1080 vs 720 and i60 vs p30
OK, my two cents here.
Before I made a final decision about HM100 I did a lot of test and look it on my Panasonic plasma HDTV (full set up to native 1920x1080p60). I made video of some water sport with intensive ball moving under different shot modes and compared picture from camcoder->HDMI->Panasonic. I decided that 1920x1080i60 is the best for sport mode because it shows a very smooth ball movement and it also shows a pretty good overall picture, resolution and color. Later I established a framefork with NLE on my notebook and I unexpectedly discovered that 1920x1080i60 is not the best! I turned back and did a couple of additional comparisons to solve a puzzle. Skipping details I want to say that comparison should be done carefully. 1) Don't use LCD for comparison of fast moving picture (just remind) - many of them have a long pixel light time and it produces a "traceable" picture of moving objects. In this case p30 looks better just because it lights little less pixels. It even may look better then p60! 2) Don't compare interleaved shots with progressive in computer monitor. Computer monitors have progressive output today and that it especially true for LCD. The typical video player in computer doesn't do a good de-interlacing job and picture looks with interlacing jadder amid with poor moving object boundaries. After I applied de-interlacing filter in Vegas Pro with _interpolate_fields_ de-interlace method the result looks much much better and reminds me a video on my Panasonic. Before de-interlacing progressive shots looked better than any interlaced. The same is actually for any HDMI output from computer to HDTV if computer graphic board supply progressive 60 - the interlaced picture looks much worse that the same shot from HM100 directly. 3) High resolution large plasma HDTV is able to cope i60 much better but I don't know how - does it use a field type of screen like a regular SD TV or has a good real-time interpolation filter. Finally I stay on my initial decision - if you want a shot for HDTV (not film and not BlueRay disk) then the best is 1920x1080i60 for high lights. Would 1920x1080p60 be better than i60? It is a tricky question - p60 leaves less exposition time for CCD pixels and the final picture would be more noisy. I think doing i60 CCD is able to provide much more efficient pixel shift process and increase resolution on the same CCD size too. |
July 27th, 2009, 02:50 AM | #33 | |
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Leonid, thanks for your input. However you talk about 1080p60, which does not exist with this camera. Did you mean 1080p30? |
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July 27th, 2009, 10:41 AM | #34 |
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No, Actually The last sentence was a generic, what could happen if JVC supports p60 on the same CCD chip size and how could it compare with another shot modes. Just note about engineering difficulties, nothing more.
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July 27th, 2009, 11:06 AM | #35 |
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July 29th, 2009, 02:46 AM | #36 | |
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When you pan up-down fine detail (brick) the horizontal detail becomes alive with "interlace twitter" which is caused by the same alternating field problem. Frankly, I am always puzzled by why folks praise the higher resolution of 1080i and yet seem not to be bothered by "interlace flicker/twitter." Perhaps this is one reason way Varicam is so loved by filmmakers. Film doesn't have this type of artifact. At NAB 2008 Sony showed me 1080p60 on their OLED display. WOW! This is the future! And, given the sensor/DSP already works with 1920x1080 at 60p -- I wonder what it would take to record it. It's not impossible. Sanyo already sells a $700 1080p60 camcorder!
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July 30th, 2009, 02:11 PM | #37 | |
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Again, I guess that flicker may happen because player-HDTV pair shows the progressive picture based on cheap reconstruction of two fields (upper and low) of an interleaved shot. In this case you may see bright pixel from upper field which comes dark during next frame reconstructed from low field. That was a primary reason why I recommend to avoid looking i60 in progressive mode. Only after rendering interleaved shot to progressive it has sense. It is actually inexpensive in CPU time, at least in Vegas Pro (unfortunately, I have not a serious experience with other NLE). |
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July 31st, 2009, 03:51 AM | #38 |
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A stringer nearby shoots football on his $10K HD, and the vision looks CARP. The images are so juddery its not funny. Its a visual staccatto that is quite nauseating to watch and grossly out of place.
My gut feeling is he cant switch the camera to shoot interlaced... Would that fix the problem? Ben |
July 31st, 2009, 05:20 AM | #39 | |
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But, what some call horrible judder, other call the look of film. Moreover, the flight of a ball wouldn't have judder since the shot would likely be wide and so the motion vector of the ball would be small. Because filmakers take care about shooting motion they minimize judder. I really don't want to leave the impression that low frame-rates can't be used. Of course they can. But, one needs to be aware.
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July 31st, 2009, 08:40 AM | #40 |
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In preparation for shooting a project involving small waterfalls which will go out to SD-DVD I have been experimenting with various camera settings (HPX170). My objective was to achieve maximum detail and realistic motion. Here were my test results outputing to DVD with playback on 32 and 40 inch HDTVs.
720/30pn, 1/60 - poor detail in water flow 720/60p, 1/60 - better 1080i, 1/60 - best with very smooth yet sharp motion I had originally wanted to shoot progessive so as to utilize the HPX170 slow - motion capability. Anyone have any suggestions to improve progressive look with this subject matter.
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August 5th, 2009, 08:35 PM | #41 |
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Steve, thank you for saying it, and I'll second it. "Death Before Interlaced" is my motto. I even cover soccer and other sporting events in 24p because I think it makes a better DVD transfer than anything else when viewed on a HDTV. (though I could capture 60p at 1/60th and use in a 24p timeline and have the 60p as a source for nice slow motion instant plays.... but that just means more work. Just pan with the action with 24p and everything is fine. I mean no one complained about judder in TITANIC or TERMINATOR 1 & 2 or any movie I remember (other than BLAIR WITCH PROJECT). You just have to be a better camera operator and really keep the shutter at 1/48th or if you have to 1/60th. But I know many films have gone over 1/500th on a static shot (before SAVING PRIVATE RYAN) because they didn't bring enough ND filtration with them.
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August 6th, 2009, 11:27 PM | #42 | |
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I think it is the artifacts of video we have learned to live with that drives film folks nuts. Things like edge enhancement that would never be found on film. Of course, dust in the film gate drove me nuts -- so perhaps it purely individual as to what folks find objectionable. In which case, camera reviewers may need to share their biases as part of their reviews. It's my visual bias that agrees, ""Death Before Interlaced."
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October 2nd, 2009, 11:18 AM | #43 |
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Two questions... (all numbers are for Europe.. 30 and 60 should be for USA)
1) Does the CCD size count when panning in progressive 25p? Will (at same frame rate/shutter) there be a difference with a 1/3sensor or a 2/3 sensor ? 2) In TV shops they sell 100Hz and 200Hz LCD and LED TVs that create missing frames from 24p BluRays and also DVDs. I can see even old movies with an incredible quality and frame smoothness. How do they do the trick? Also.. I remind.. LCDs don't have "real interlaced" (electronic pen drawing first upper lines then lower lines) but what they do really is create 50 full frames from 50i. For example ... I've been told some TVs have a realtime circuit that can create a 1080/50p stream from a 1080/50i stream by interpolating in this way... Let's say I have 1ul, 2ul, 3ul, 4ul, etc.... They create (1u+1l), (1l+2u), (2u+2l), (2l+3u), etc... In this way.. sure they interpolate but they have 2 different "full" frames from every single 50i frame and they can have a 50p stream from a 50i signal. Is it possible that I cannot find any plugin/software etc.. that uses a similar process to change my 1080/50i into a 1080/50p and not a 1080/25p ? .. still.. I don't understand what 100Hz and 200Hz TV set do ?!! |
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