View Full Version : HD10 vs. Varicam! It starts Friday! And need help...


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Heath McKnight
November 6th, 2003, 11:08 PM
Well, after not knowing where the HD10 was (his super had it), my friend busts out the HD10 to shoot with the Varicam! I'm psyched! (Unfortunately, he rented out the DVX100 Tuesday, so only two-way comparisons.)

I'm psyched!!!!!!!!!!!!

heath

ps-He'll hang onto the camera, but he's gonna send the down-converts, etc. to me. He also posts on this board once in a while, so he'll probably do a review. He's the most professional dude I personally know in the HD business.

pss-any ideas how to cleanly go from HDV to DV????

Chris Hurd
November 6th, 2003, 11:17 PM
Outstanding, Heath...

Really looking forward to this. Anyone want to take a crack at Heath's question? (HDV to DV)

Heath McKnight
November 6th, 2003, 11:22 PM
I wish I was in NYC.

heath

Chris Hurd
November 6th, 2003, 11:24 PM
Heath, when you have an idea, let me know how much bandwidth you'll need. We can host a few clips online for ya.

Eric Bilodeau
November 6th, 2003, 11:26 PM
2 ways I know of and used:

1) capture directly from the HD10 analog output a 480p (or i) downconverted to a DV camera or deck with input options or a SD capture card.

2) capture the m2ts via firewire or the HD signal via a HD capture card and software downconvert to DV.

Both give good results, #1 is faster but #2 is better if you need to tweak the images since you can do it in HD before the downconversion.

Heath McKnight
November 6th, 2003, 11:31 PM
Thanks, just emailed him the info, Eric. Man, I'm dying here, wishing I was in NYC. This movie sounds kinda cool and I've never seen a VariCam (or CineAlta) in action before.

heath

Troy Lamont
November 7th, 2003, 12:25 AM
Heath,

pss-any ideas how to cleanly go from HDV to DV

Is this for the shoot-out of just FYI for yourself? The test will involve both cameras at 720p correct? Thanks.

I just left NYC, dang it! :)

Troy

Heath McKnight
November 7th, 2003, 12:35 AM
It's to down-convert...I just wanted to FYI Jon the DP.

heath

Les Dit
November 7th, 2003, 01:58 AM
Please don't down convert to anything lower resolution than 1280 by 720 pixels, as that would crush out the detail we are dying to see.
If you have a DV cam to compare with, size that up to the HD size. Nothing lost in that conversion.

Thanks for any tests you may run, regardless,
-Les

Christopher Toderman
November 7th, 2003, 09:31 AM
both cameras are 720p and should be compared at this resolution at verious lighting levels, various colorfulness, various contrast, various motion, various amount of highlight lighting, at various shadow darkness, at various focal length. Varicam should then be converted to 720/30p

Don Berube
November 7th, 2003, 11:19 AM
I can't see how you can expect the HD10 to compare to an $85000 VariCam 27, the difference in all areas is night and day.

- don

Eric Bilodeau
November 7th, 2003, 11:26 AM
Not quite, I had experience with both and the HD10 is surprisingly close in some situations. Of course, artefacting is very apparent on the HD10. Definition is very quite equivalent, color reproduction is of course more saturated with the varicam. Keep an open mind, you might just be surprised here.

Don Berube
November 7th, 2003, 11:35 AM
I have experience with both cameras and I still maintain that the VariCam 27 outputs a significantly better image in all areas with a far superior manual control and image setup options. Color saturation is dependent upon what setting you choose. I'm always open to new, more affordable technology and quite honestly, my intention is not at all to denigrate the value of the HD10... but really, we are talking about two completely different classes of camera performance here - one camera that sets the standard for High Definition acquisition and one that wants to set the standard for the consumer HDV format.

- don

Heath McKnight
November 7th, 2003, 12:04 PM
I agree, though mini-dv wasn't too bad compared to BetaCam, and esp. to DVCPro. I use DVCPro and mini-dv a lot (XL-1 and XL-1s), and both are very close.

heath

Christopher Toderman
November 7th, 2003, 02:01 PM
We may see some surprises. Varicam is significantly more compressed than even the DVX, with both footages at 24p; Varicam's compression is based on the DV format, while HD10 is using more efficient MPEG2. I'm sure that there will be no situation that the JVC will be equal to the Varicam, unless the Varicam is not set up right and the JVC is. We've already seen on this board comparison of the JVC to CineAlta, where the images were supposed to be close in quality. This was even more autrageous. Still in certain situations the JVC should come close to the Varicam.

Graeme Nattress
November 7th, 2003, 02:33 PM
Christopher - how is the Varicam significantly more compressed than the DVX at 24P? The Variacam uses DVCproHD which is 100mbits/second, rather than DV which is 25mbits/second (even in 24p because it's still recording a 29.97 signal). The Varicam has 3.5 times more pixels resolution than SD NTSC, which would equate to a 28mbits/second data rate equivalent if it were an SD format for the number of pixels pro rata, making it slightly less compressed rather than significantly more.

MPEG2 may be "more efficient", but 19mbits/second is still woefully deficient to record an HD signal with any kind of fidelity. Standard definition DVDs with even more efficient MPEG2 still show artifacts at it's full 9.2mbits/second data rate, yet 720P is nearly 4 times the resolution, yet they're using only twice the data rate.

As for the JVC being close to a CineAlta - I've worked with Panavision and their 24p HDCAM camera, and the footage I've used with Panavision is so far superior to the JVC it's not funny.

Graeme

Frank Granovski
November 7th, 2003, 02:35 PM
Christopher Toderman wrote: Varicam's compression is based on the DV format, while HD10 is using more efficient MPEG2. I'm sure that there will be no situation that the JVC will be equal to the VaricamThat's utter nonsense, Christopher. I suggest you get your facts correct before posting this kind of nonsense.

Brad Hawkins
November 7th, 2003, 03:52 PM
Don wrote : "but really, we are talking about two completely different classes of camera performance here - one camera that sets the standard for High Definition acquisition and one that wants to set the standard for the consumer HDV format."

You are absolutely right that these are two seperate classes of cameras and I don't think any of us HD10 owners would ever dream that the JVC could out duel the VariCam. We may be optimists but we're not stupid ;)

Still, I for one am interested to see how much is lost from the Varicam to the HD10 because I doubt that you'll lose 90% in quality, which is however the difference in price!

Plus, I think it will provide a simple apples to apples comparison. It will provide a point of reference for us all, so we will no longer have to simply go on the word of others like yourself who have used the more expensive cameras.

Brad

Christopher Toderman
November 7th, 2003, 09:29 PM
Frank Granovski wrote: That's utter nonsense, Christopher. I suggest you get your facts correct before posting this kind of nonsense.

Any technical knowlege or understanding of the technical issues to back up your claim Frank?


Graeme Nattress wrote: Christopher - how is the Varicam significantly more compressed than the DVX at 24P? The Variacam uses DVCproHD which is 100mbits/second, rather than DV which is 25mbits/second.

720p has about 2.25x more pixels than 480p. Varicam records 60p. Going through rate converter 60% frames are eliminated, resulting at 40 Mbps at 24p, vs. 25 Mbps for DV. This makes the Varicam image a lot more compressed.

Because of this low effective transfer rate Varicam is also more compressed than CineAlta, and that include chroma too.

Both CineAlta and Varicam are using compression scheme based on the Sony developed scheme for DV. MPEG2 is more modern and efficient, just as MPEG4 is more efficient than MPEG2.

As I said, any kind of result that would indicate the JVC image would be equal to the Varicam image would have to be questioned as to how the test was conducted. Previous claim on this board that this camera's image is close to CineAlta image is even more outrageous.

Potential for the HDV format? If 3 full resolution CCDs and excellent quality MPEG2 encoding are used, this format can have image equal to that of Varicam. Canon may surprise us here. If Varicam is good enough to make feature films, so may be upcoming HDV Canon. That will mean a true revolution in filmmaking. Whatever this format promises, the JVC unfortunately misses.

Heath McKnight
November 7th, 2003, 09:39 PM
Christopher T.,

Anything you'd like to see specifically tested? I'll email my friend.

heath

Christopher Toderman
November 7th, 2003, 10:33 PM
HDV has a great potential. HDTV broadcasts are mostly 1080i at 19 Mbps, encoded in MPEG2. 1080i HDV is 25 Mbps. Because of the digital transparency, HDV is all that will be needed to produce HDTV content. I already covered HDV quality potential in comparison to Varicam. Another factor is that the upcoming revolution of digital projection will make give additional edge to digital, vs. film.

The biggest factor here is that HDV is an open format. HDV recorder, less the MPEG stuff is an HDV recorder. They are digital and will be equal. This craetes an opportunity for other companies to enter the HDV pro market. HD will no longer be conntoled by Sony and Panasonic, who may be fearful of quality HDV competition. The JVC is built with too many limitations probably of this fear, as JVC is owned by Matsushita, maker of the Panasonic label.

I think that Canon will be the first to come out with a superb HDV camcorder that will be usable for filming, and will naturally have a new line of interchangable lenses. P+S Technik may be working with Canon right now on their adaptor. So affordable filmmaking is around the corner.

Ikegami has been using both Sony and Panasonic SD recorders with their camera heads. Thompson makes pro HD cameras -- Viper, etc., and consumer DV. Samsung must have been eying the pro market for some time. They certainly have as much capability to produce quality stuff tht is comparable to top Japanese firms. Sharp is heavy into HDTV flat-screen sets. So all these firms are potential producers of high quality HD cameras.

Sony and Matsushita are very aware of the competiton HDV will bring to their SD and Varicam equipment. The death of SD is very near. There is no way Sony will be able to sell $40K cameras if a fraction costing Canon camera will be better. I'm sure that Panasonic will be coming out with a lot better camera than Varicam. They see the writing on the wall.

There will be pressure on Sony and Matsushita to make their HDV cameras better than the upcoming cameras of Canon, Ikeagmi, Hitachi, Sharp, Samsung, and Thmpson. The next couple NABs will be very interesting and will probably mean a start of an era when a highschool student will be able to win an Oscar, with a $100 budget documentary, using dad's HDV camcorder.

HD Blu-ray DVD recorders are held in their introduction mainly because of Hollywood'd copyright threats. But there is no threat to blu-ray HDV camcorders. This too is an open format. Unfortunately it was developed by Sony and Matsushita is a part of the consortium. So again we may see an attempt to keep the format from competing with CinaAlta, etc. However Blu-ray camcorders will be available soon; the recorders have been selling in Japan for some time already.

With the introduction of blue laser there will be other recording format and it will not take long for Toshiba or Pioneer to make available a burner with 100 Mbps or higher transfer rate. Now we are talking about CineAlta level of qulaity, and with a quality MPEG processor even higher quality. If Samsung ads a good qulity head to this, we may see CinaAlta quality at a very small price.

By that time Sony and Panasonic will be promoting uncompressed formats for filmmaking. But you and I will be able to own a camera with similar quality that Lucas and Rodriguez made their blockbuster and near blockbuster films with.

Heath McKnight
November 7th, 2003, 10:40 PM
I have first impressions from Jon. I'll post up in another thread later.

heath

ps-He'll write a full review on Tuesday once he gets the VariCam footage downconverted.

Christopher Toderman
November 7th, 2003, 10:41 PM
Heath, can you do same shots outdoors in direct sunlight, in a shadow, in a studio, with a vareity of contrast, at normal, low, and very low lighting, also slow panning shots. Colorful set too would be helpful.

Could someone with DVX loan this to Heath so we may have a good reference point where the JVC is in comparison? DVX should be tested in progressive, 30p, 4:3 aspect ratio, as no good anamorphic adaptors exist.

Heath McKnight
November 8th, 2003, 12:44 AM
This is my friend shooting, not me, in NYC.

He's using his DVX100 in two weeks with the HD10, but NO Varicam, sorry.

heath

Graeme Nattress
November 8th, 2003, 06:24 AM
Christopher wrote: "720p has about 2.25x more pixels than 480p. Varicam records 60p. Going through rate converter 60% frames are eliminated, resulting at 40 Mbps at 24p, vs. 25 Mbps for DV. This makes the Varicam image a lot more compressed."

But in your earlier post you wanted to compare both cameras as 24p. If the Varicam records at 60p and just records 24 frames in that interval thus wasting 60%, then the DVX at 24p is wasting 12 fields out of 60 fields (DVX being a 60i camera?)? Giving an effective data rate of 20Mbps for the DVX?

Let's check my maths again - I'll write out the steps to see what's going on.
720P is 720 * 1280 pixels? = 921600
480P is 480 * 720 pixels? = 345600

921600/345600 = 2.66 - this is different from the number I said earlier which was way off, and the number you quoted earlier too? Any ideas?

Varicam is 40Mbps for 2.66 times as many pixels as DVX, which would give it 15Mbps compared to 20Mbps for the DVX at 24p from above pro rata.

Ok - it's signifantly more compressed - how funny is that? Thanks for helping me with that one Christopher!

But - is Varicam 4:2:2 or 4:1:1 like DV? If so that would change the figures, would it not?

I agree that MPEG2 has greater efficiency, but the version being used is a delivery codec rather than a production/acquisition codec. Even if it's the same data rate as HDTV broadcasts then that's no indication of quality due to HDTV looking a bit crap and artifacty.

Christopher Toderman
November 8th, 2003, 07:27 AM
I thought that the DVX records at 25 Mbps even at 24p. If that is the case then it is less compressed in both luma and chroma. If it is 20 Mbps, which I don't believe is the case, then it is overall less compressed than the Varicam, but the Varicam, having 4:2:2 sampling would be less compressed in chroma, more in luma than DVX, but overall more compressed. Although Varicam is 4:2:2 and CineAlta approx. 3:1:1, it is less compressed than Varicam in both luma and chroma. So the calam that 4:2:2 means better colors is meaningless at 40 Mbps.

The MPEG processing on the JVC is crappy but future camears could have quality processors and then we are on the Varicam picture quality level.

Graeme Nattress
November 8th, 2003, 08:40 AM
Christopher - by your argument that 24p on the 60p Varicam that although it's recording 24 frames per second, it is really recording 60 frames per second, and many of them are the same, and hence redundant. The camera does not take this redundancy into account and still records 60 discrete frames per second, and hence gives no data rate advantage to 24p recording? Is this so - I think it is from what I've read?

Then the same replies to the DV format DVX which records 24 frames per second, yet the frame rate stays at 60i, hence by the argument above for the Varicam, is the equivalent of 12 fields redundancy, which equates to 20% of the data rate being wasted, unlike, as you pointed out on the Varicam where it's a massive 60% wasted.

Looking at the numbers again taking colour sampling into account:

DV = 25Mbps for (720 * 480) * (1 + 1/4 + 1/4) = 518400 pixels per frame

Varicam = 100Mbps for (1280 * 720) * (1 + 1/2 + 1/2) = 1843200 pixels per frame

which means that the varicam is spreading its data over 3.55 as many pixels (including colour and luminance)

which gives:

DV 30fps = 0.83Mbpframe
Varicam 60fps = 1.66Mbpframe = 0.46Mbp DV sized frame - almost half the effective data rate.

Doing the figures at 24p gives the same results as the calculations above are per frame. So taking into account the colour sampling makes matters worse, not better.... This has turned out to be very interesting. Thanks.

Christopher Toderman
November 8th, 2003, 09:52 AM
Grtaeme, the recorded stream is 100 Mbps on Varicam and then the rate converter discards 60% frames when it transfers the 60p to 24p so the effective rate at 24p is 40 Mbps. DVX records in 30p or 24p in progressive and the bit stream is 25 Mbps at either speed. It does not record 60i in the progressive mode. Varicam samples chroma twice as many times as 4:1:1 format, but the pixel count is 480x720 and 720x1280.

Graeme Nattress
November 8th, 2003, 10:24 AM
Christopher - the DVX records at 25Mbps all the time, but when you take it into CinemaTools to extract the 24p the resulting data rate of the 24fps file is 20Mbps. In All modes it records a 60i signal that "looks" like it's 24p or 30p (in 30p there is no temporal difference between the fields, but it's still a 60i standard DV signal, and in 24p the 24 frames get spread out over the 60 fields using 3:2 or 2:3:3:2 ? pulldown).

You are still correct - the VariCam is more compressed than DV - and I find that very funny!

Barry Green
November 8th, 2003, 10:40 AM
The VariCam records 1280 x 720 x 60P in 100mbits.

That's 552,960 pixels per megabit.

The JVC records 1280 x 720 x 30P in 19mbits.

That's 1,455,158 pixels per megabit (about 3x as compressed as the VariCam).

Standard-def DV records 720 x 480 x 60i in 25mbits.

That's 414,720 pixels per megabit.

Any talk of the frame-rate converter and discarding frames, etc is just confusing the argument, and completely irrelevant. The VariCam, and the DVX, record fixed frame sizes at a constant bit rate and constant data rate, whether shooting 24P, 30P, 60i, or (on the VariCam) any other frame rate.

So the VariCam is slightly more compressed than DV, but much, much less than the JVC. Those are the simple facts, but the notion or concept that this means anything, is simply absurd. The VariCam picture is EXTREMELY much better than the JVC or DV, and it doesn't really matter how you get there or what the compression format is or whatever, so what is the point of this discussion?

Brad Hawkins
November 8th, 2003, 11:30 AM
Heath wrote:

"This is my friend shooting, not me, in NYC.

He's using his DVX100 in two weeks with the HD10, but NO Varicam, sorry."

What do you mean no Varicam? I thought the whole point of this thing was to compare the HD10 with the Varicam. Please straighten me out here.

Brad

Christopher Toderman
November 8th, 2003, 01:53 PM
The Varicam records 60 fps. The footage has to go through a rate converter where frames are discarted to arive at 30p or 24p. So at 24p the effective rate is mere 40 Mbps. The recorded rate is irrelevant.

DVX in progressive outputs true progressive pictures. If it records one frame in two parts does not matter.

Of course the JVC should be compared to the Varicam. Both are 720p. The JVC is more compressed. So what? DV is many times more compressed than DigiBeta and it is usable for TV. The picture of DigiBeta is not EXTREMELY much better than DV. Why exaggurate quality of the Varicam.

It is is sad that Varicam is more compressed than DV.

Heath McKnight
November 8th, 2003, 02:21 PM
Though interesting, this has gotten off topic.

hwm

Ken Hodson
November 8th, 2003, 04:03 PM
One request.
When the clips are compiled, if you could put the different cam shots in one clip (ala the HD1 vs DVX) that would great. The back and forth flipping between the two (or more) cams in the same clip gives the best comparison by far.

Don Berube
November 8th, 2003, 06:40 PM
>>>>The picture of DigiBeta is not EXTREMELY much better than >>>>DV. Why exaggurate quality of the Varicam


Christopher,

Could you please tell us a little about yourself and your background? I'm curious as to what extent you have actually utilized an HD10 or 10U? Or even a Panasonic VariCam for that matter? Have you ever worked with any VariCam footage at all? If so, please elaborate as to what degree - perhaps that might help to qualify your commments - even perhaps just a little bit.

It is not "exaggurating" to state that the Panasonic VariCam 27 outputs *significantly* better quality pixels than the HD10 or HD10U, hands down.

I'm talking about the actual image here, ok? Not just what you perceive the effective file size to be. That means color space, color detail, bit rate, dithering, chroma noise, interleaving, anti aliasing, lattitude, etc...

Let's keep it real here and remember that this is not denigrating the HD10U by pointing out that the quality of recorded pixels generated by the single, smaller 1/3" CCD of the HD10U in no way compares to the output of the 2/3" CCD's of the Panasonic VariCam.

Sure, you can converge reality into the equation and state that for under $4000, the JVC HD10U is at least appealing to those who do not have the means to work with the higher-end professional High Definition Television format. It would also be very accurate to state that the HD10U gives us a very tangible example of the constraints and limitations of the extremely compressed recording format that the JVC HD10U relies on. Even if JVC had actually produced an HDV camera with a lens mount to allow better glass and real, tangible professional-level manual control, we would still be limited by that single 1/3" CCD and the extremely compressed JVC HDV recording format.

Hey, this is not denigrating JVC at all by pointing out this truth,,, they certainly have raised the bar of performance for the consumer format.

- don

Christopher Toderman
November 8th, 2003, 10:46 PM
Worked mainly with CineAlta lately, DigiBeta prior to that, plus film. I have no high opinion of the JVC; have seen some footage, have tried the camera. Have seen plenty of Varicam stuff and tried the camera. The JVC is piece of ...... when compared to Varicam. So is the image. But I disagree with this comment that was made in this thread: "The VariCam picture is EXTREMELY much better than the JVC."

The HDV format is promising, if the camera head is right and the processing is right. The JVC CCD does not even put out full HD resolution. The effective horizontal pixels are only about 960, not 1280, per Steve Mullen's teport in Video Systems. The vertical resolution is not full either. HDV compression is more efficient, or rather has the potential of being more efficient, than that of Varicam, or CineAlta. Of course the JVC is not Varicam, just as Varicam is not CineAlta, although a number of falk who own Varicam claim that Varicam, because of its 4:2:2 is more of a cinema camera than CineAlta. That too is false. They claim that the color is better because it is less compressed. Because it is more compressed than even DV, it is naturally not. Unfortunately in this forum there were tests that compared the JVC favorably to CineAlta and the past moderator supported this motion, which was ridiculous. Anyway, Heath is right, this has gotten off topic, as he says. So I'll rest my case. Still the Varicam is a lot closer in quality to CineAlta than the JVC is to Varicam, naturally. The past moderator also staed in this forum the new Panasonic 900 has a lot better picture than the JVC. I've seen the same thing. Unfortunately later on he supported the oposite of this opinion, which I think was ridiculous too. One day we'll see a high quality HDV camera. It will be probably first from Canon. The day is not too far away. The JVC is not this type of camera. It definitely is not a professional one. Adding pro mic jacks don't cut it. Still I believe that the shootout against Varicam will bring us some interesting imageas. None should be better than the ones from the Varicam. But some stationary ones, where the contrast is flat and lighting level is high, will look good. It should be especially in the middle of the lens zoom, where it is probably sharpest.

Les Dit
November 9th, 2003, 03:05 AM
While we are a bit off topic ...
I am only interested in the JVC for home-hobby-art use. I use film at work, in a digital form.
The examples of the JVC blow away any DV stuff I've seen, the sharpness reminds me more of film than video.
For the foo foo video folks, the so called high end HD cams are all video toys as well, as long as they give you 8 bit images.
Sorry, but 256 levels just dosn't cut it, and I certainly hope that major feature films don't dumb down the visuals to that blown out video look.
Now I did see "Our Lady of the Assassins" on film, shot in HD, and it looked pretty good.
I also know that when Lucas shoots HD, they dump the uncompressed video to drive arrays. They only use the tape for cases that the camera could not be hooked to the drives for motion reasons. The tape was for bakup mostly.

I did hear that some HD cams make 10 bit video files. Now you can color correct a bit more, and still have a good image.

-Les

Ken Hodson
November 10th, 2003, 07:09 PM
Christopher-"The effective horizontal pixels are only about 960, not 1280, per Steve Mullen's teport in Video Systems."

You have made this statement often enough to have prompted me to start this thread-
http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?s=&threadid=16421

Steve Mullen and others clarify the situation in that thread. The bottom line is the HD10 is closer to true 720HD resolution, then say the XL1 is to true DV resolution. Yet no one harps that the XL1 isn't a true DV cam!
Ken

Heath McKnight
November 10th, 2003, 08:18 PM
<<<-- Originally posted by Brad Hawkins : Heath wrote:

"This is my friend shooting, not me, in NYC.

He's using his DVX100 in two weeks with the HD10, but NO Varicam, sorry."

What do you mean no Varicam? I thought the whole point of this thing was to compare the HD10 with the Varicam. Please straighten me out here.

Brad -->>>

No, it's no Varicam when the DVX100 comes back in, and Jon does the tests. The Varicam is being used right now. I think I posted it in that last post.

heath

Heath McKnight
November 10th, 2003, 08:20 PM
<<<-- Originally posted by Don Berube : >>>>The picture of DigiBeta is not EXTREMELY much better than >>>>DV. Why exaggurate quality of the Varicam


Christopher,

HD10 or HD10U. -->>>

Don,

The HD10 IS the HD10u--JY-HD10U. Do you mean the GR-1?

heath

Christopher Toderman
November 11th, 2003, 04:29 AM
Ken Hodson Wrote: "The bottom line is the HD10 is closer to true 720HD resolution, then say the XL1 is to true DV resolution. Yet no one harps that the XL1 isn't a true DV cam!"

Answer to Ken Hodson: Of course XL1 is a true DV, and its horizontal resolution is excellent. HD10's horizontal resolution lies exactly half-way between DV and 720p. Please read the previous moderator's report in Video Systems, which was well referenced in this forum. The ex moderator later on aparently forgot what he discovered and described, very scientifically, in Video Systems.

We should be accurate in our statements. There is no need to exaggurate quality of a camera, claim that HD10's picture quality is close to CineAlta, or that Varicam is better than CineAlta, etc., as Varicam owners claim, just because they can't afford CineAlta. Major motion pictures were made with CineAlta. None with Varicam. There is a very good reason. And the JVC is no Varicam, but falls at best between the DVX and Varicam. If you'd stand on that line connecting quality of Varicam and DVX, at the point where is the JVC, you'd be too close from the DVX and too far from the Varicam. CineAlta will be just as distant from the Varicam as the Varicam is from the DVX. That is what I saw myself.

Frank Granovski
November 11th, 2003, 05:05 AM
Christopher Toderman wrote:Of course XL1 is a true DV, and its horizontal resolution is excellent.Excellent, meaning what? The maximum resolution of what miniDV is capable of? That would be 540 horizontal lines. The XL1 plays back 460 lines.We should be accurate in our statements. There is no need to exaggurate quality of a camera....

Christopher Toderman
November 11th, 2003, 05:16 AM
The JVC is 25% off, 1/2 way between SD and the lowest level of HD. I rest my case.

Eric Bilodeau
November 11th, 2003, 07:45 AM
You seem to forget that 25% off HD720 is much less noticeable than 25% off SD. As for the pixel count of both the XL1 and the HD10 the ratio is not 25% less for the HD10, it is 0,91:1 (840,000:921,600), horizontal lines is a bizare way to state definition, especially with progressive scan. The XL1 falls very short 0,72:1 (250,000:345,600), especially in 16:9 stretched. I used the XL1 a lot and the image is good but not very sharp. Compared to the DVX or even the GL2, it lacks a lot of sharpness and you can see that without fancy material. I also tested the HD10 with the Varicam and it is close, so close that we where not able to tell the difference in definition (I did this test with and for people that have been working with HD for years). Test it, you will see how close it is, you really don't need all this "techno babbel", what you see is what you get. All I see is a lot of theory without bothering to test as it was when miniDV came out, the VX1000 was bombarded by techs all over the place telling it was not good, not equivalent, unusable, crap etc... While those people where arguing, some people took the damn thing and made history with it. You either fear it or use it but there is potential, oh yes...

Jeff Donald
November 11th, 2003, 08:27 AM
Resolution does not double as image size doubles. Resolution is usually measured as line pairs per millimeter. It is a linear scale. Doubling the pixels will only result in 1.4x improvement in resolution.

Eric Bilodeau
November 11th, 2003, 08:42 AM
You are right of course Jeff but I still don't see the point of such a scale if it is not seen with the same screen size each time. A lot of HD is now seen on LCD screens or computer screens with pixel ratios, not line counts. Even the upconverters and digital/analog converters offer the out to SVGA/RGB/YUV option now.

Christopher Toderman
November 11th, 2003, 11:36 AM
Answer to Eric Bilodeau:

I wanted to rest my case but I have to answer this. After that, please state whatever you want. I will not get involved in this fruitless stuff. XL1 is a 3-chip camera, with the pixels offset, so it could have a full resolution of the DV format. If it does not has nothing to do with the chips. There are other problems with the JVC CCD besides not having enough pixels. It was very well explained in Video Ststems. The horizontal resolution is full 25% diminished. The deficiency is a lot worse than that of the XL1 percentagewise. The XL1 is close to the approx 500 lines of the DVX format. The JVC is way off. I have seen images from both the JVC and the Varicam. As I said, if it can be compared to anything, it is closer to the DVX in progressive, and very distant from the Varicam. Although the horizontal resolution falls at a midpoint between the two, it has too many other defficiencies compared to the DVX. Resolution is not everything. I rest my case forever on this camera. If anyone thinks that the images are similar to the Varicam, or even CineAlta, all power to you. Just relize that when you go to a stereo showroom, the dealers have a way to place the speakers and do other tricks that you choose the ones that the dealer makes most profit on. So if any tests show that this camera has an image that is similar to Varicam, buy it and enjoy it. Good luck.

Heath McKnight
November 11th, 2003, 11:38 AM
Have you really USED the camera?

Les Dit
November 11th, 2003, 01:58 PM
have you *seen* the existing DVX vs JVC clip, the one with the blond 'lady' in front of the video equipment?

The DV just plain looks out of focus when viewed against the JVC.
There is just no comparing the two. I had to do a blur 1.9 on the JVC image to get it as blurry as the DVX image.
I've shown that test clip to any number of people and the reaction is always "Wow!"

I think we should expect a lot of chatter from standard DV 3 chip users that are maybe a little annoyed that there is a new kid on the block. ( and he doesn't wear Coke bottle eye glasses !!! )
I know the JVC has it's problems, but all around it makes up for it with it's sharp image. And I'll know *I'll* be annoyed when Sony comes out with a HDV after I get my JVC !

-Les

Mark Jervis
November 11th, 2003, 02:05 PM
I'll be the first to admit defeat. I own a JVC GY-DV500 which is one of the 3 chip 1/2" DV cameras that beats the XL1, etc. and I now own 2 HD10's and they are blowing my DV500 away in most situations. I still find myself using the dv500 for low light situations and since it has a 20x lens on it I can get better reach but overall the HD10 is much better. I have done my own side by comparison and don't need anymore convincing. The previous post about diffusion on the HD10 helping is true. Try throwing a Promist .5 or 1 infront of the camera and watch the hot spots practicaly disappear, it was amazing. As everyone is saying, this isn't a Varicam but there will always be people trying to make one camera look like the other. Sometimes they are called pioneers, sometimes they are crazy. Just thought I would put in my 2 cents on the issue, not to offend anyone if for some reason I have.

-Mark