Glen Elliott
March 18th, 2004, 09:59 AM
As some of you may know I recently sold my DVX100 (which I owned 1 month shy of a year) and opted for a PD-170. Recieved it yesterday and here are my first impressions:
1. The first thing I noticed is the build quality. Very sturdy and rugged feeling. The body does seem to lack metal on the right side where the tape transport is though. To me it felt simply better built than the DVX did. Granted the DVX is supposed to be ALL magnessium-alloy but doesn't "feel" like it...not that it matters how it "feels", just a peeve of mine I suppose
2. Another peeve that might not hold any value is the size of the lens. Granted, I knew purchasing this camera that it's lense was physically smaller than the 72mm DVX. Maybe things like the lense "size" give you the feeling of value and quality..I dunno.
3. Lens hood. I absolutly love the lens hood. I know, I know...it's just a hood- however, little details like this impress me. Not only is it made out of a rubber composite but it has a really neat latch that activates two flaps that shut and act as a built in lens cover. The hood definitly feels like it can take some knocks whereas the DVX feels like if it tapped something it would break under it's own brittleness. The built-in lens cap is very nice as I hate having to stash the cap in a pocket with fear of loosing it. Again not a big issue but nice attention to detail. Kudos Sony!
4. Focus and zoom controls. They were some of my biggest complaints about the build of the DVX were the feel of the focus and zoom rings. The focus had no resistance...felt like I was turning a loose lid on a jar of peanut butter. The zoom was even worse it felt sloppy- the ring had a few mm of play.
The PD-170 zoom rings are smooth and sleek. They offer good resistance and feel solid (very similar to Canon DV lenses). The one thing the DVX has an advantage on is the zoom on the DVX feels like a real zoom. In other words when I turn the zoom ring it's changing the focal length on the lens simultaneously like it would on my EOS 10D lens. The sony feels like it's an electronic zoom ring...and I don't think there is a servo button I'm missing.
Regardless I'll take electronic controled zoom ring over a sloppy one any day...just my opinion.
5. LCD. The LCD on the PD170 is very impressive. It's not quite the size of the gigantic 3.5" DVX LCD. Despite it's dimunitive size it seems like it has better resolution (maybe someone can confirm this). I also heard that the LCD can easily be seen even in sunlight. Have to test it out.
The viewfinder on the DVX and PD-170 are practically the same as far as resolution is concerned though having the PD-170 in B&W is a nice touch and will definitly aid in locking focus. Notably the DVX viewfinder does feel a bit more bulky and robust compared to the PD-170's.
6. Controls. This is where Sony blows away the DVX- but keep in mind this can be mostly due to the fact I stared shooting DV on a Sony TRV17 years ago, and the layout is familiar. I really like having the shutter, white balance, gain, and audio controls on the back all controled by a unified wheel. Very clean well laid-out system. I absolutly hated the volume knobs of the DVX- very difficult to reach and clumsy to control. I do however like the fact that the adio controls are accessable at anytime and not hidden in a menu. Same thing goes with the SteadyShot....I wish it wasn't hidden in a menu and that it could be toggled on and off with a simple flick of a button...especially beings I do a lot of tripod to handheld and back shooting.
Lastly I wish there was a way to have the audio meters visible at all times without being inside of a menu. The DVX displays audio bars in real-time, all the time which is helpfull. You can't always trust your ears when audio is spiking and having a constant visual reference will definitly help.
So in all there are a few things I miss that my DVX had but the benefits definitly outweight the negtives, two-fold. I look forward to doing more tests with the actual video quality, as I've not shot any footage yet- and as they say the proof is in the pudding. However, comparing in regards to functions and build I'd definitly have to give it to the PD-170 hands down.
1. The first thing I noticed is the build quality. Very sturdy and rugged feeling. The body does seem to lack metal on the right side where the tape transport is though. To me it felt simply better built than the DVX did. Granted the DVX is supposed to be ALL magnessium-alloy but doesn't "feel" like it...not that it matters how it "feels", just a peeve of mine I suppose
2. Another peeve that might not hold any value is the size of the lens. Granted, I knew purchasing this camera that it's lense was physically smaller than the 72mm DVX. Maybe things like the lense "size" give you the feeling of value and quality..I dunno.
3. Lens hood. I absolutly love the lens hood. I know, I know...it's just a hood- however, little details like this impress me. Not only is it made out of a rubber composite but it has a really neat latch that activates two flaps that shut and act as a built in lens cover. The hood definitly feels like it can take some knocks whereas the DVX feels like if it tapped something it would break under it's own brittleness. The built-in lens cap is very nice as I hate having to stash the cap in a pocket with fear of loosing it. Again not a big issue but nice attention to detail. Kudos Sony!
4. Focus and zoom controls. They were some of my biggest complaints about the build of the DVX were the feel of the focus and zoom rings. The focus had no resistance...felt like I was turning a loose lid on a jar of peanut butter. The zoom was even worse it felt sloppy- the ring had a few mm of play.
The PD-170 zoom rings are smooth and sleek. They offer good resistance and feel solid (very similar to Canon DV lenses). The one thing the DVX has an advantage on is the zoom on the DVX feels like a real zoom. In other words when I turn the zoom ring it's changing the focal length on the lens simultaneously like it would on my EOS 10D lens. The sony feels like it's an electronic zoom ring...and I don't think there is a servo button I'm missing.
Regardless I'll take electronic controled zoom ring over a sloppy one any day...just my opinion.
5. LCD. The LCD on the PD170 is very impressive. It's not quite the size of the gigantic 3.5" DVX LCD. Despite it's dimunitive size it seems like it has better resolution (maybe someone can confirm this). I also heard that the LCD can easily be seen even in sunlight. Have to test it out.
The viewfinder on the DVX and PD-170 are practically the same as far as resolution is concerned though having the PD-170 in B&W is a nice touch and will definitly aid in locking focus. Notably the DVX viewfinder does feel a bit more bulky and robust compared to the PD-170's.
6. Controls. This is where Sony blows away the DVX- but keep in mind this can be mostly due to the fact I stared shooting DV on a Sony TRV17 years ago, and the layout is familiar. I really like having the shutter, white balance, gain, and audio controls on the back all controled by a unified wheel. Very clean well laid-out system. I absolutly hated the volume knobs of the DVX- very difficult to reach and clumsy to control. I do however like the fact that the adio controls are accessable at anytime and not hidden in a menu. Same thing goes with the SteadyShot....I wish it wasn't hidden in a menu and that it could be toggled on and off with a simple flick of a button...especially beings I do a lot of tripod to handheld and back shooting.
Lastly I wish there was a way to have the audio meters visible at all times without being inside of a menu. The DVX displays audio bars in real-time, all the time which is helpfull. You can't always trust your ears when audio is spiking and having a constant visual reference will definitly help.
So in all there are a few things I miss that my DVX had but the benefits definitly outweight the negtives, two-fold. I look forward to doing more tests with the actual video quality, as I've not shot any footage yet- and as they say the proof is in the pudding. However, comparing in regards to functions and build I'd definitly have to give it to the PD-170 hands down.