In: Camcorders
31 Jul 2010I will use some of the film of dirt racing. The cars are about 40 to 60 mph … It is fast and strong … I need to keep the camcorder and can not spoil or stop the recording.
So you do not want to use a floppy disk drive (HDD) camcorder basis. The sound waves can be high enough where the floppy drive can park the heads of the hard drive and not allow the recording. This is to protect the hard disk, disks, so that the head is not Scruff together and lead the reader to plant – and you get no video (or video camera is faulty). Camcorder MiniDV tape and flash memory does not have this known problem with the drive camcorder hard drive.
Typically, flash memory and hard drive camcorders to record consumption at the same level of video compression formats and file types – BMP, or MOD for standard definition, or DOT for MTS High Definition. Digital cameras and digital SLR cameras usually record in MOV or AVI format and are also quite strongly compressed.
The problem with many video compression is to know how does the video capture and processing, “or group management. With the compression, the group is so important when you fall, then the whole group can be bad, what you because it would be seen as “poor quality, jerky video.” So … your goal is to use a less compressed video format, such as commonly used in quality that the consumer camcorder flash memory or hard drive for video storage.
DV, DVCAM and DVCPRO are lower compression standard-definition video formats. HDV, HDCAM, XDCAM, DVCPRO HD and MXF formats are low compression high definition.
When you review your needs in the flash memory or MiniDV cassette, low compression, we know – that you have to consider your budget, too.
But if you want to shop …
Consumer notes (both MiniDV cassette; MIC manual audio control):
Canon HV40
Sony HDR-HC9
Prosumer (both MiniDV cassette have; MIC manual audio control):
Sony HVR-HD1000 (shoulder mount)
Sony HVR-A1U
HDR-FX1000
Grade Pro
Canon XHA1
Sony HVR-Z5 (DV / HDV / HDCAM)
Panasonic AG-HVX200 (DVCPRO HD formats)
JVC GY-HM100 (H.264 MOV file format)
Canon XLH Series (DV / HDV Training)
Canon XF series (MXF)
There are a few others – but it’s a decent starting point.
Nothing with AVCHD – too much compression.
This is about gadget and consumer electronic information question.