Ray Liffen
March 20th, 2005, 02:55 AM
Yesterday was the the first chance to use the FS-4 on a job - in this case a wedding, and give it a field test.
The camera was a VX2000 and I rigged up a mounting using an L-shaped bracket (normally for extra mics, lights etc). The supplied belt clip was fitted horizontally at the top of the upright of the 'L' and the upright drilled for two self-tappers under the clip to stop it slipping. This meant that the FS-4 was upright, with the firewire connector coming out of the top. The info screen could be read easily from the side of the camera, even when a high tripod was used. As the VX2000 was the 'backup' camera for most of the shoot it was useful to be able to check the FS-4 at the same time as I did my periodic checks on the VX's fold-out screen.
Feedback - well, Focus will have to do something about longer battery life. Yes, the supplied 850mAH will JUST do 90 mins of continuous recording, but life isn't like that. I ran the VX with a tape in at LP to give parallel working. The VX will get from OFF to to Rec Pause in 7 secs. The FS-4 takes 15 secs. The temptation therefore is to leave the FS-4 running so that you can pick up on an interesting shot quickly. But if you leave it running it consumes power, so Tape 2, for example, still had 10 mins of recording left when the Battery 2 died on the FS4. In other words, two fully charged batteries are not enough to record the full capacity of the hard disk under field (ie, less-than-perfect) conditions
Don't forget there is no way to charge FS-4 batteries on a shoot, because there is no external battery charger available. Batteries have to be charged on the FS-4, so I couldn't re-charge until the shoot was over.
So for mobile use the most urgent need is increased battery life.
Other points:
1. It would be really nice to have a 'confidence' LED that blinks when the FS-4 is recording. If you are remote from the camera you need to know that you are actually putting video data on the hard disk.
2. I'll be looking around for a 4-pin-to-6-pin firewire lead that is no more than 15 inches (38cm) long and has a right-angle plug on the 6-pin. The supplied lead is to long and unnecessarily thick for on-camera use.
Electronically the FS-4 works fine. It is the practical points to do with 'real world' use that need refining.
Ray Liffen
The camera was a VX2000 and I rigged up a mounting using an L-shaped bracket (normally for extra mics, lights etc). The supplied belt clip was fitted horizontally at the top of the upright of the 'L' and the upright drilled for two self-tappers under the clip to stop it slipping. This meant that the FS-4 was upright, with the firewire connector coming out of the top. The info screen could be read easily from the side of the camera, even when a high tripod was used. As the VX2000 was the 'backup' camera for most of the shoot it was useful to be able to check the FS-4 at the same time as I did my periodic checks on the VX's fold-out screen.
Feedback - well, Focus will have to do something about longer battery life. Yes, the supplied 850mAH will JUST do 90 mins of continuous recording, but life isn't like that. I ran the VX with a tape in at LP to give parallel working. The VX will get from OFF to to Rec Pause in 7 secs. The FS-4 takes 15 secs. The temptation therefore is to leave the FS-4 running so that you can pick up on an interesting shot quickly. But if you leave it running it consumes power, so Tape 2, for example, still had 10 mins of recording left when the Battery 2 died on the FS4. In other words, two fully charged batteries are not enough to record the full capacity of the hard disk under field (ie, less-than-perfect) conditions
Don't forget there is no way to charge FS-4 batteries on a shoot, because there is no external battery charger available. Batteries have to be charged on the FS-4, so I couldn't re-charge until the shoot was over.
So for mobile use the most urgent need is increased battery life.
Other points:
1. It would be really nice to have a 'confidence' LED that blinks when the FS-4 is recording. If you are remote from the camera you need to know that you are actually putting video data on the hard disk.
2. I'll be looking around for a 4-pin-to-6-pin firewire lead that is no more than 15 inches (38cm) long and has a right-angle plug on the 6-pin. The supplied lead is to long and unnecessarily thick for on-camera use.
Electronically the FS-4 works fine. It is the practical points to do with 'real world' use that need refining.
Ray Liffen