It seems there are limitations to PDAF and video. Choice is to buy handycam VG10 as it has
interchangeable lenses with nex5
DSLR with video is not meant for FULL TIME videoing.
As you already mentioned yourself, if you want to do mainly video, it's easy to know that you need a dedicated videocam.
VDSLR is really good for people who occasionally needs 1-2 mins short footage of some candid moments, like pets or kids or family outings where we do not need to carry 2 equipment.
Anyway, for such footage, it normally would be quite boring if the video is more than 2 mins....
Funny how Roystan Tan can shoot his Old Places of Singapore entirely on 5DMII and this http://philipbloom.net/2010/04/10/house-season-finale-shot-entirely-with-canon-5dmkii/
I am not saying XX brand VDSLR is better than YY or ZZ brand. Its just that, the professionals had done it, will continue to do it. There are always workarounds. From my understanding, production house like it. Giving them the options of tonnes of lens to work with. WA, FE, telephoto etc... Just wondering how they overcome the overheating issues only. Maybe shoot in short clips.. and to stich them up into a full video... ?
...
Movie clips can be up to 4 GB in size, approximately 12 minutes of 16:9 HD (1920x1080) or 24 minutes of 4:3 SD (640x480) footage (depending on scene complexity). These limits stem from the 4 GB maximum file size supported by the FAT32 filesystem format used on Compact Flash cards. The camera also imposes a hard maximum clip length of 29 minutes 59 seconds if the 4 GB limit has not already been reached. Video clips are recorded as Quicktime MOV files with H.264/MPEG-4 (Base Profile @ L5) compressed video and uncompressed PCM audio at 48 kHz. HD bitrate is approximately 38 Megabits per second (4.8MB/sec) and SD bitrate is approximately 17 Megabits per second (2.2MB/sec). Although the internal microphone is mono, stereo audio is supported through the audio input jack. When recording for long periods, especially in warmer climates, increased video noise may occur due to CMOS overheating.
Funny how Roystan Tan can shoot his Old Places of Singapore entirely on 5DMII and this http://philipbloom.net/2010/04/10/house-season-finale-shot-entirely-with-canon-5dmkii/
I am not saying XX brand VDSLR is better than YY or ZZ brand. Its just that, the professionals had done it, will continue to do it. There are always workarounds. From my understanding, production house like it. Giving them the options of tonnes of lens to work with. WA, FE, telephoto etc... Just wondering how they overcome the overheating issues only. Maybe shoot in short clips.. and to stich them up into a full video... ?
I guess I learn now that cameras are not practical to take videos longer than 30 minutes and cannot replace camcorders.
I wonder how the camcorders handle this heat problem.
Perhaps they can solve this camera problem in the future like the camcorders.
Then what about mobile phones with a 16 GB SDHC card and does a long video recording ? What happens ?
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The technology between camcorder is slightly different and the sensor size differs also Panasonic is introducing a 4/3 sensor digital professional video cam I think that holds the answer to your questionsbut looking...
I read somewhere they normally take 10-15 mins per take and they are using 7 cameras![]()
I see thats. Thats my guess too .
Hi, Some overheating solutions, every little bit helps:-
Use tripod or other kind of rig rather than hand-hold
use large metal lens as a sort of heat sink to absorb heat instead of plastic
retract swivel LCD away from camera body for ventilation
shoot short video sequences of around 8 minutes
then notice whether the warning thermal goes off
One important area to look at in terms of sensor overheating is the form factor.
DSLRs and DSLTs are based on SLRs where enough space in depth is offered for film, so replace it with a Sensor, which is mounted on a PCB, then with a powerful processor not far from it, then it's all mounted flush against the rear side of the cam, against a LCD backlight, or against the plastic rear end (in the case of Articulating screen DSLR/DSLTs), and you can see that there isn't much space for cooling. The problem compounds when the body becomes even bodies. All these add up to generate a lot heat in a small place.
If you look at the actual video performance times of a A33 and A55. The A55 has a denser sensor, a faster processor to process more information. That's why you'd see that it will choke on heat even sooner than the lower spec'd model.
The design of DSLR/DSLT's form factor is as such that, it's got little depth to provide adequate space for efficient cooling, especially when compared to Video-cam form factor machines.
The layout for traditional camcorders allows for quite a bit of space between the rear end of the sensor and the corresponding PCBs, to allow for more efficient cooling of the system, a tried and tested form factor. That's why you don't get limits with you operate video cams, they got depth in space. So with the A33/NEX3/5 burning up eventually, you don't get this with the VG-10.![]()
something i found from other links, maybe after the video the a33 exploded cos of the heat (sarcasm fully intended)
http://vimeo.com/15367938