Hi both,
It's a JVC GR-DF460EK. It was RRP at £399 at one point (don't know if it still is), but I got a refurbished "A grade" one on ebay for £200. It's ridiculously small - the battery pack (5 hours) is almost as big as the camera and sticks out so far that I can no longer get my eye to the viewfinder!
I'm not sure whether the design priority was smallest or cheapest, or a mixture of both. I picked this one because it has an inbuilt light, a "biphonic" mike input, colour low light ability, steadycam, and AV as well as DV out.
Actaully, I thought it was AV/DV in as well when I bought it, but no, nothing so useful.
The low light thing is not useable - the shutter speed is so slow that any movement blurs across the screen very slowly. The built-in light is not bad though, good for spooky investigations! The steadycam thing jitters from quantise-point to quantise-point, especially zoomed in. I don't think I can turn it off.
I haven't shot any film in good light yet, so everything so far has been in dimly-lit artificial lighting. I'm getting colour-bleed (particularly reds) - I don't know if brighter lighting would improve this. I need to experiment more...
Overall it's unergonomically small and extremely flimsy and looks and feels like a child's toy.
All in all I wouldn't recommend this camera to anyone. But you get what you pay for and this is just a home consumer product designed to last a couple of family holidays. However, as I couldn't afford anymore than that, needed the spec and I've never had any kind of video camera of my own before, I'm still enormously pleased to have it, despite its flaws.
Quote:
but it's still the talent and skill of the camera operator which makes the biggest difference.
Eeeek! That's just what I was afraid of!
Quote:
Plan to let the action happen in front of the camera rather than zooming, panning, or moving the camera around. Watch TV programs for their camera techniques. You'll notice the professionals do very little zooming or moving. They shoot in short seqments to keep your attention. "Home movies" tend to be painful because they bounce around too much, and the segments are too long and boring.
Good tips, Fred, thanks - I think I suffer from both the bouncing and the boring things!
Quote:
'prosumer grade' DV camcorders?
What sort of price range are these?
Best,
Melanie