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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Even a dualslot is not failsafe, I had a "rebuild media" error on both cards simultaneously during my last wedding shoot, there was no dataloss as the camera did rebuild the data for whatever reason but when this message appears you cannot shoot anymore until you do the rebuild which requires going into the menu and select that option. I had 2 fast cards in use at that moment and shot in a 50mbs codec so speed was not the bottleneck but they where 2 different brands (kingston and sandisc) and 2 different sizes (64gb en 128gb) which might have caused the problem, I continued to shoot with one card the rest of the day without any issues. Will most likely get me 2 identical jvc approved cards for a next weddingshoot.
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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Noa, that must have been scary!
I usually shoot with 1 camera. Maybe a 700d as a wide back up if possible. I always use the same brand and card when using dual slot recording. I won't mix a 16gb with a 32gb nor one that records 95mb/s and one that records 60mb/s. I once had a problem on a 7D with a CF card. costly to fix. With the dual slot cards FCPX once went haywire and erased the card rather than importing it. Luckily I had the other card! Anyway, I'm just trying to contribute to the discussion although I guess we've all gone through this before! |
Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Has anyone got a preferred brand of card, I generally use sandisk extreme pro, the thought of card failure worries me.
Phil |
Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Serious wildlife videographers who need the best telephoto possible have been left out in the cold in the past 5 years. Interchangeable lenses are a must. A small sensor (1/2 inch or less) is important, because your telephoto comes from the crop factor more than the lens. Frame rates of at least 120 fps have been shown to be the threshold for really good-looking slow motion. And, or course, 4K is essential.
All of these features (except the interchangeable lenses) are available in little consumer type cameras. You may be able to find them in super expensive models. Why a manufacturer doesn't put them in a $3,000-7,000 range instrument is beyond my understanding. The old Sony PMW-300 (which I use) is the closest thing available, but it's really outdated. Digiscoping is not a solution. I think it's an example of "the squeaky wheel gets the grease" and all the squeaking is coming from users who want huge sensors. So that's what the manufacturers give us. Great for humans. Not great for warblers. |
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Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Hi Nigel,
Thanks for the reply. No interchangeable lens and 1' sensors are deal-killers on that one. Equivalent focal length of at least 2000mm is what bird-guys need. |
Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
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Mark P.S. Also has 3 CCD sensors.... so practically a "global shutter". |
Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Hey Mark,
You're absolutely right about the XL-H1. Great camera (lousy viewfinder). I went through two of them in the mid 2000s. |
Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Steve,
I guess if I were to take up wildlife filming now, I'd take a look at the Panasonic GH4 micro four-thirds camera. I see some on here are using that camera with the Sigma 150-600mm and tele-converter. So, if my math is right, with a 2.3x crop at 4K on the camera, with a 1.4X TC and using a Metabones Canon EF FF to MFT Adapter with that 150-600mm EF lens, you get 1,932mm in 35mm equivalent. Camera $1,298 + Sigma 150-300mm Contemporary with TC-1401 $1289 + Metabones Canon EF FF to MFT Adapter (MB EF-M43-BT2) $390.82 = $2,977.82. The Metabones T SpeedBooster Ultra 0.71X Adapter for Canon FF EF-Mount Lens to MFT Mount Camera (MB SPEF M43-BT4) is $642.58, and you will lose some zoom reach, but gain some light. If you buy the GH4 with the Video Interface Unit, it costs $1,700. I read that the HDMI port outputs 4:2:2 10-bit, so not sure I'd need the video interface unit. Also, if shooting in 4K for a FHD project, you get to crop in during editing and that gives even more virtual zoom. I don't know what happens to the 2.3x crop factor when you go to full HD mode for high speed mode shooting though. Maxes out at 96FPS & 100Mbps bit rate. Sounds like a manageable set-up. Compared to a regular video camera that can shoot 4K and do the high frame rates, this is a pretty inexpensive route to go. I don't think I could find a 1/2" sensor video camera set-up that will let me reach out to 2,000mm for less than $25,000. I'm about to get my bonus and looking at what I can do with about $4,000, so I thought I'd dig into this wildlife thing a bit, as I haven't tried any of that yet. Mark Edit: I found where HD is 2x crop factor and also high frame rate in FHD is really 60p. Higher than 60p suffers image degradation, like it's SD uprezed to HD. |
Re: What matters to you? - Camera Selection
Mark,
Some interesting ideas. I'll look into this. Thanks. |
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