3CCD or HD ?


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ShawnQuah

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I am intending to get a videocam soon. Looking at the current advancement, what would recommend, to buy a 3CCD cam now or HD?
 

3CCD is a must for HD images as R.G.B capture pre channel. HD still NEW and some user already switch over to HDCam. The only you are looking for is HAD 3CCD chip or CMOS chip.
If budget is not a issue than go for HD with those SD+HD recording format in 1 cam. :D:thumbsup:
 

I am intending to get a videocam soon. Looking at the current advancement, what would recommend, to buy a 3CCD cam now or HD?
depends on the budget, so far at mass consumer level only Canon HF11 can record at 24mbps using cmos which should be the same as minidv quality. Even panasonic 3ccd is now going to 3cmos from what i see.
 

I received feedbacks from users that the current HD models don't really perform very well under low light conditions, instead the 3CCD models are still better.

I am comparing between Sony DSR PD-170P to Sony HVR-D1P

Comments?
 

ShawnQuah

I think the term you are trying to use should be "SD" vs "HD". SD is standard definition. HD is high definition.

Both SD and HD has CCD or CMOS version.

For more information, you could read up on these terms.

What is your budget like for the new cam? What are you using it for?
 

erm.. quick one.

dv cams can have 1 CCD or 3 CCD's or 1 CMOS or 3CMOS' sensors. These only describe how many sensors the camera have, whereas a SD (standard definition 480lines) or HD (720 or 1080lines) describe the resolution of the recorded signal.

In laymen terms, 3 sensors = better colour, better dynamic range (retaining shadow and bright area details).

Everything is a compromise of cost and performance. There is nothing that is cheap that will give you good colour, dynamic range at the same time. You have to decide what is best compromise now. To buy something "average" to practice your shooting and editing skills until you are good enough at story telling to qualify yourself to use better cameras.

If you're a beginner, you're better off deciding which is a better recording format (dv tape or solid state memory (SD card) or hard disk). dv tape is still used by pros but it's slow to transfer video into computer for editing. (speed is 1x, ie; 1 hour of material takes 1 hour to tranfer) SD card and hard disk is much faster (if you used thumb drives, you'll know how fast).

hard disk recording is sensitive to shocks when you're recording, which might give you some data loss when you subject the camera to excessive shock.

tape media still allows recording of higher data rate at the moment for mainstream (4figure budget) cameras, except Panasonic's P2, Ikegami EditCam, GV's Infinity, Firestor's HDD for regular cams and but not limited to Sony's XDCAM, all of which are more expensive than tape equivalents for now.

Have fun telling your stories!
 

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