DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   Canon VIXIA Series AVCHD and HDV Camcorders (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/canon-vixia-series-avchd-hdv-camcorders/)
-   -   panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10 (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/canon-vixia-series-avchd-hdv-camcorders/501118-panasonic-tm900-vs-canon-hf-g10.html)

Tom Roper October 13th, 2011 07:49 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
For me, it would come down to how the G10 would compare in 60i mode versus TM900 60p mode. My $0.02 is that 24p has to be shot with a tripod in which case I'd just use a bigger cam since having to deal with cam supports defeats the purpose. Now you're looking at an even bigger resolution deficit, so the question is does the G10 account for itself well with superior shadow detail when used in high contrast outdoor lighting? I'd really like to know that. Everybody can benefit from high performance in a small package. This is the advantage of many, that goes to the EX1, it's still a hand held with OIS and 1000 tv lines.

Jeff Harper October 13th, 2011 08:16 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
The fact that the G10 and the EX1 are even being compared says it all to me.

Tom Roper October 13th, 2011 12:42 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
I'm not comparing the G10 to the EX1, I have not seen the type of native footage from it that could suggest that it could, but loosely they are both hand held and have OIS.

Tom Roper October 13th, 2011 12:54 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
My thinking is as follows, the TM900 can in about 20% of situations match appearance and 1000 tvl resolution of the ex1. We know the GH1 at best manages 850, but if it could approach the dynamic range and shadow detail in 20% of situations, the tm900 and g10 would weigh in about equally for me.

Jeff Harper October 13th, 2011 03:11 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Federico Perale (Post 1688290)
the Canon is on a different league here: I have to say it's so good, with the ability to have clear good pictures even with very little light. again, it reminded me the EX1r - it's that good.

The Panasonic in low light does what it can: I think it's a great improvement over its predecessors, but obviously there is a limit there. if you push the gain over 9db grain appears and a very unpleasant one.
Still I think it's perfectly usable in average light conditions.

If the TM900 is good enough for someone, it doesn't matter. Then one doesn't have to spend the extra on the Canon. If you want the better IQ, the Canon is the better choice. I would rather deinterlace a better 60i image than to start with an inferior progressive image any day.

Fredrico finds unpleasant grain at 9db with the Panasonic. I find the Canon good at 18db.

As a wedding shooter, average lighting conditions are an exception, not the rule, so I need the larger sensor, but that's just me.

Tom, 20% of which situations?

Federico Perale October 13th, 2011 03:46 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Harper (Post 1688451)
If the TM900 is good enough for someone, it doesn't matter. Then one doesn't have to spend the extra on the Canon. If you want the better IQ, the Canon is the better choice. I would rather deinterlace a better 60i image than to start with an inferior progressive image any day.

Fredrico finds unpleasant grain at 9db with the Panasonic. I find the Canon good at 18db.

As a wedding shooter, average lighting conditions are an exception, not the rule, so I need the larger sensor, but that's just me.

Tom, 20% of which situations?

Jeff please.....my name is Federico : ) not Fredrico

Jeff Harper October 13th, 2011 04:38 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
What if I just call you Fred :)

Ok, thanks Frederico.

Tom Roper October 13th, 2011 06:20 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff harper
If you want the better IQ, the Canon is the better choice. I would rather deinterlace a better 60i image than to start with an inferior progressive image any day.

I want the better image quality, and I would rather start with a better 60i image and not deintelace it at all, but I'm also not yet convinced the G10 has a better image or that the TM900 60p progressive image is inferior any day. Have you owned a TM900 Jeff?

I'm very interested in Federico's observations, he owns both. In my analysis, the TM900's low light performance is a weakness, as is shadow detail in high contrast bright light situations. For sure, the G10 would be better with the former, but is it better with the latter? I'm not sure because it starts with a hefty disadvantage of much lower resolution. So moving aside the poor AWB of the TM900, how does it compare when manually white balanced?

Jeff Harper October 13th, 2011 08:09 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Tom, the lower resolution of the Canon is not a problem it is an advantage, it is native 1080. The higher resolution of the Panasonic is a disadvantage for video. People mistake a higher resolution chip to be better, but for video a native 1920x1080 chip is preferable because the pixels are larger. This is not opinion, it is physics.

This is why, as we've discussed in this thread before, why the Panasonic takes better photos, but the Canon does better video. The Panasonic is not physically capable of the video the the Canon, again, it's not about opinion, it's a matter of physics.

I'm sure we'll get a further reports from Frederico, I'm interested to hear them.

Tom Roper October 13th, 2011 09:00 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Jeff, I'm not mistaking anything regarding the subject of resolution because I'm not referring it to the sensor but to the measured resolution that camcorderinfo reported in their tests from shooting zone plates. The G10 sensor is native 1920x1080 which is great, but because it is one chip design it sits behind a bayer filter, that and due to row summation for interlace is what drops the measured resolution to 600 tv lines vertical, about the same as good HDV. They measured the TM700/900 much higher. This is a subject I do know something about because I've made resolution measurements myself on various cams and posted the results right here at DVINFO. I use the Imatest imaging software shooting with an ISO12233 chart. I don't have an agenda here other than to get and provide objective, non-biased info. There is no disputing the fact the TM900 is the small cam resolution king of sharpness, but does that make it the best? Not by itself! That's why it's important to factor in the other measures less easily obtained, like dynamic range. You expect that a camcorder with good low light will also excel at dynamic range in bright contrast situations, but by how much? That's what I'm interested in knowing!

Jeff Harper October 13th, 2011 09:25 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Tom, larger sensors normally typically have inherently better dynamic range. That is why the Canon stands out from some of it's competition, it is native 1920x1080 and it is larger. It's not the be-all and end-all of camcorders, but as of right now there just isn't anything in it's price range that can beat it's IQ.

I've seen video sample of both, over and over, and there just isn't any comparison, IMO. I knew about the Panasonic long before the Canon, and if I had a preference for brand before this Canon came out, it was for Panasonic.

I wasn't interested in the Panasonic TM900 from day one, outdoors it does a poor job of resolving detail in green spaces, which is another hallmark of a 1/4" sensor. The first video I saw shot with the TM900 was outdoor wedding footage and it just couldn't cut it. The guy who shot the video thought it looked fine, and I just scratched my head. It looked pasty and weird to me.

And despite what some of it's owners say, it is relatively grainy in low light using a relatively modest amount of gain, and no I don't have to own it to know that, and Frederico just confirmed it for me.

I ran the XA10 today for a coroporate shoot, and it blew away my GH2 with a $1000 lens on it. Now granted, the lens was the weak link, but it was still a high grade Olympus lens. I went with the Canon and my images were much better. Equipped with a fast prime, my GH2 would blow away the Canon, of course, but that is besides the point. The sensor on the GH2 is like .75" or something crazy like that, so it's not even a fair comparison.

But I've run the Canon for two weddings at 18db or higher and the images are excellent. No noise that I can see at 18db. That is freaking phenomenal. There may be noise I'll pick up in editing later, but the raw footage was perfect as far as I could see.

So we can debate this endlessly, but to me it's a commons sense thing, matter of fact, no emotion, no real love for either brand. It is what it is. And I've been scared to use the Canon each time I take it out, because I normally shoot with the GH2, but every time I use the camera it performs beyond my expectations.

Jeff Harper October 13th, 2011 11:08 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
This debate is not dissimilar to one we had years ago re: the FX7. It had 1/4" chips also and the users of that camera would argue to the death about the greatness of that camera, and I never understood it. I got ganged up and beat up pretty badly in the FX7 forum over that. And there are still users of that camera that love it.

I had the FX7 for a month and sold it at a loss, and was glad to be rid of it. I had been warned by more experienced shooters that that it wouldn't hold up in low light, but I was on a budget and thought I could make it work. Even outdoors it looked like crap to me, it didn't look right, it wasn't grainy, it was instead pasty or something. On the other hand, I admit I did see some paintball footage shot by someone with it, and I had to admit it looked very nice.

Same with the TM900, in the right hands, it can certainly shoot some very nice footage, and some videos I've seen are really nice. However, for run and gun , I personally don't have the time to squeeze every ounce out of a camera like that. I need a camera that is excellent out of the box, and can produce great images in pretty much any situation I'll encounter.

I'll be the first to admit, I'm really not a particularly good shooter. I am not creative, and my footage is pretty run of the mill, so I need the best images I can afford to offset my weaknesses. That is why I am such a stickler on the low light ability of a camera, I need every advantage I can get.

Federico Perale October 14th, 2011 03:36 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Update: after using both camcorders like crazy I am more convinced that the Canon has a much superior quality to it.
it's not sharpness, it's the actual "depth", the perception the image is not flat.
still I've only managed to test in low light - this morning I shot some comparison shots with full auto mode in both cams in daylight and will report.

I have to say, though, that the OIS of the Canon seems definitely less ideal than the Panasonic.
I haven't really experienced wobble, but I sometimes see some stutter (barely noticeable but definitely there).
now... I am not sure if this is an inherent issue with CMOS sensors, but for some reason I don't see that at all with the Panasonic.
It's difficult to explain, it's as if the OIS in the Canon wasn't...smooth enough at times and you can see that in the playback. has anyone experienced this with the G10/XA10?

finally the Canon seems to be less efficient in terms of battery life: Panasonic has already outperformed as it's still running from my first charge whereas the Canon (with same amount of shots done) is almost gone.

ps. Jeff: once again my name is Federico, not Frederico (nearly there mate)

Don Palomaki October 14th, 2011 05:59 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
With respect to the final product the bigger issue with most decent camcorders is the skill of the shooter, and the editor for most video. Camcorder selected can make a difference when used at the edges of operating envelope by a skilled shooter.

In the days of tape, battery life mattered mainly if you had to change battery before you had to change tape. With flash memory with several hour capacity, that rule of thumb no longer applies. Given taht it takes only a 10 seconds or so to change battery, as long as extra batteries are available, and will give you run times longer than the longest continuous shot before a 30 second or so break, I do not see it as a major issue.

I've read that the TM900 is a minor update to the TM700, and that was a very nice camcorder for its price point. I am impresed with the XA10 (upgrade version of the G10), and from the limited time I've used it, prefer its video over the TM700,

In the end, buy what makes you feel good.

Jeff Harper October 14th, 2011 09:02 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
What battery are you using? I'm using the largest ones, and two get me through a whole day pretty well, but I don't use the camera for pre-ceremony only the ceremony and entire reception. The stock battery is pretty pathetic for the Canon, maybe gives an hour.

Federico Perale October 14th, 2011 12:24 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
I've just discovered that for some stupid reason canon has the quality setting almost at the lowest setting by default (9bps) so all these comparisons were done with 9bps versus the (I think) almost 40bps of the Panasonic 50p!!

Jeff Harper October 14th, 2011 02:17 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
40bps, wow, large files. I had no idea. What codec does the Panny use, AVCHD or MPEG 2?

Federico Perale October 14th, 2011 03:58 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
I will try to post an example, but the footage of the Canon looks at times jerky at times when panning - has anyone experienced anything similar? the tm900 seems MUCH better in that respect

I've seen several report of Jello issue for the Hf G10? I wonder if it's simply a matter of a not-so-great-OIS....

Jeff Harper October 14th, 2011 04:15 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
What mode are you shooting in? 24p is normally jerky, and yes it is on mine in 24p also. Same with the GH2, 24p is jerky, it is normal. 24p requires slow pans.

The Panasonic is known for producing extremely smooth footage, so your findings are typical, and this was true of the 700 as well. You will not be able to smooth out the Canon other than by slowing down your pans.

Federico Perale October 14th, 2011 06:00 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
25p (in 50i)
Unfortunately the European version doesn't have native 25p

Jeff Harper October 14th, 2011 06:09 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
What??? That's awful. I don't shoot 24p, as I'm very happy with 60i, but still that really sucks. I use HDLink so it would be no issue to deinterlace, but how crappy that you have to do that.

Actually with 25p (60i) do you have to do anything with the footage when editing, or can you just output it for Bluray as 60i, and it will retain the 25p look?

Federico Perale October 14th, 2011 06:41 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
I haven't tried yet, but I never shoot 50i, only 25p

Jeff Harper October 14th, 2011 06:59 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
I've shot my last twenty wedding in 720 60p, it's extremely nice. But because the Canon doesn't shoot 720p, I now shoot 60i so all my cameras match. It's still very nice.

24p or 25p is nice I suppose but I use DSLR type cameras that achieve a lot of things with DOF, which is more important to me than frame rate.

I miss 720 60p a little, but its no big loss. The Canon at 60i, is good enough for me. It's images are so good I'm going to sell of a DSLR and get another XA10. I will probably do like you and start shooting 24p at some point.

Federico Perale October 15th, 2011 06:14 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Federico Perale (Post 1688578)
Update: after using both camcorders like crazy I am more convinced that the Canon has a much superior quality to it.
it's not sharpness, it's the actual "depth", the perception the image is not flat.
still I've only managed to test in low light - this morning I shot some comparison shots with full auto mode in both cams in daylight and will report.

I have to say, though, that the OIS of the Canon seems definitely less ideal than the Panasonic.
I haven't really experienced wobble, but I sometimes see some stutter (barely noticeable but definitely there).
now... I am not sure if this is an inherent issue with CMOS sensors, but for some reason I don't see that at all with the Panasonic.
It's difficult to explain, it's as if the OIS in the Canon wasn't...smooth enough at times and you can see that in the playback. has anyone experienced this with the G10/XA10?

finally the Canon seems to be less efficient in terms of battery life: Panasonic has already outperformed as it's still running from my first charge whereas the Canon (with same amount of shots done) is almost gone.

ps. Jeff: once again my name is Federico, not Frederico (nearly there mate)

an example of my point about the OIS of the Canon - I put together quite quickly a video I then uploaded to youtube (for some reason I can't seem to upload on vimeo today)
never mind of rough it is. it's intentionally panning fast
I did a few shots some with standard OIS and other with dynamic one

have a look at the following seconds - the point is that I see some "wobble" or at times the right side looks a bit stuttery.
20sec (buildings on the right side) , 40sec (again on the right side), 59sec (handle of the door), 1.59sec (right side)

what do you guys think?

prova canon HF g10 wobbleWMV.wmv - YouTube

incidentally does anyone know the best format to render to for youtube/vimeo? I tried MainConcept AVC but didn't like the end result. this one is actually WMV 6.7mbps, and it's not bad at all (please remember to select 1080 on youtube)

Don Palomaki October 16th, 2011 06:51 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
The XA10, and presumably the G10, defaults to recording in SP mode (7 Mbps), a substantially lower bit rate recording mode than the camcorder is capable of doing (MPX is 24 Mbps). Further SP is a nominal 1440x1080 (not square pixel) image.

For anything approaching serious work, I would use MXP mode.

Jeff Harper October 16th, 2011 06:58 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Don, thanks. Mine was set at FXP, just checked. I am glad to know this now, and not after shooting my final few weddings of the season.

Federico Perale October 16th, 2011 01:04 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Thoughts about the clip I posted? Is that wobble/jitter within what's expectable from the camcorder?

Jeff Harper October 16th, 2011 03:47 PM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Dynamic is said by some to be not so great, I don't know. If you're shooting in 24p, then the pans look very good to me when you're in normal mode. Panning is always tough in 24p. In 24p I don't think panning is advisable when handheld if you can avoid it. Pans in 24p are optimal when done very slowly from a tripod or when following a subject.

When handheld you should avoid panning if possible especially in 24p, just my opinion. Instead shoot in the classic style of fixed shots. Hit record, record shot, stop, frame your next shot, hit record.

24p is not suitable for run and gun, that is not how it is ideally used.

If you shoot run and gun, I would shoot in 60i, with your camera. 60p is ideal for run and gun, but we don't have it with this camera.

Federico Perale October 17th, 2011 02:53 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Harper (Post 1689131)
Dynamic is said by some to be not so great, I don't know. If you're shooting in 24p, then the pans look very good to me when you're in normal mode. Panning is always tough in 24p. In 24p I don't think panning is advisable when handheld if you can avoid it. Pans in 24p are optimal when done very slowly from a tripod or when following a subject.

When handheld you should avoid panning if possible especially in 24p, just my opinion. Instead shoot in the classic style of fixed shots. Hit record, record shot, stop, frame your next shot, hit record.

24p is not suitable for run and gun, that is not how it is ideally used.

If you shoot run and gun, I would shoot in 60i, with your camera. 60p is ideal for run and gun, but we don't have it with this camera.


I shoot in 25p (which is not native anyway) but I take your point about interlaced. thing is I do narrative so interlaced has that "news" look to it I don't always like it.
my point was trying to understand if my g10 is somewhat defective as I heard they sometimes have more issues than the xa10 with the OIS>
check out at 00:59.... doesn't it look a bit "stuttering"?

Colin Rowe October 17th, 2011 03:10 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Harper (Post 1688709)
40bps, wow, large files. I had no idea. What codec does the Panny use, AVCHD or MPEG 2?

17 mbps AVCHD, 28 mbps 1080/50p

Colin Rowe October 17th, 2011 03:16 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Federico Perale (Post 1689094)
Thoughts about the clip I posted? Is that wobble/jitter within what's expectable from the camcorder?

Pefectely normal.

Federico Perale October 17th, 2011 03:19 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Harper (Post 1688709)
40bps, wow, large files. I had no idea. What codec does the Panny use, AVCHD or MPEG 2?

AVCHD..... strangely though, when I tried some slow motion on Vegas it didn't look THAT good anyway...
I even tried with Twixtor and I wasn't impressed...

what's amazing in the Panasonic is the smoothness and steadiness of the image...much more so than the canon

Federico Perale October 17th, 2011 03:23 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Harper (Post 1688709)
40bps, wow, large files. I had no idea. What codec does the Panny use, AVCHD or MPEG 2?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colin Rowe (Post 1689235)
Pefectely normal.

thanks Colin.... I just thought it looked a bit wobbly at times... I think I have to live with the fact that the OIS is a bit of the Achille's heel compared to the Panasonic. for everything else I have no doubts I like the g10 more

times are quite exciting: just think about what can come up in the next few months/years for prosumers camcorders!! unthinkable just a few years back. If Canon finally releases a new XA10 with 50/60p it will be an incredible piece of kit (which it already is)
f

Federico Perale October 17th, 2011 03:27 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Colin Rowe (Post 1689233)
17 mbps AVCHD, 28 mbps 1080/50p

the TM900 has variable bit rate so at 50/60p some users have reported peaks of 38/40mbps

(The Official Panasonic HDC-TM900 Owners Thread - Page 25 - AVS Forum)

Jeff Harper October 17th, 2011 06:01 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
60p or 50p has the best slow motion. You cannot have it both ways with the XA10. It doesn't have 50p.

You mention poor slow motion in 25p. That, again, is the nature of the frame rate you have chosen. 24p or 25p does not have the greatest slow motion.

If you are running the Panasonic in 50p, or whatever, (I don't remember what mode you are running the Panasonic or if you said) it will have smoother motion, because that is what 50p does, it produces very smooth images.

If you compare the two cameras you must shoot in the same frame rate to get an accurate comparison. If you are shooting at different frame rates it is apple to oranges.

To get the better images + smoothness you want you would have to buy another camera. The logical choice to "have it all" would be the XF100 or the upcoming new Panasonic AG130.

The panasonic has 50p, the Canon has the better sensor. That's is the problem. You want a camera that combines both.

Federico Perale October 17th, 2011 06:26 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Colin Rowe (Post 1689233)
17 mbps AVCHD, 28 mbps 1080/50p

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Harper (Post 1689267)
60p or 50p has the best slow motion. You cannot have it both ways with the XA10. It doesn't have 50p.

You mention poor slow motion in 25p. That, again, is the nature of the frame rate you have chosen. 24p or 25p does not have the greatest slow motion.

If you are running the Panasonic in 50p, or whatever, (I don't remember what mode you are running the Panasonic or if you said) it will have smoother motion, because that is what 50p does, it produces very smooth images.

If you compare the two cameras you must shoot in the same frame rate to get an accurate comparison. If you are shooting at different frame rates it is apple to oranges.

To get the better images + smoothness you want you would have to buy another camera. The logical choice to "have it all" would be the XF100 or the upcoming new Panasonic AG130.

The panasonic has 50p, the Canon has the better sensor. That's is the problem. You want a camera that combines both.

I agree the best of both worlds would have been the XF100, but it's out of my budget, it's bigger than the G10, and does 50p only at 720 and not 1080. I 've made my decision and it's to keep the Canon as it's just a better camcorder. shame for the frame rate.

Jeff Harper October 17th, 2011 07:02 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Yes, I know. I almost didn't buy it because of the lack of 60p, but am so glad I did anyway. 60i with the camera produces very good images. I'm about to put up a video today with footage from the XA10 and while I haven't see yet how it might be mangled by Vimeo, on my computer the video is very nice.

As I've said before, I have been shooting in 720 60p with the GH2, and it is beautiful. I can't even imagine what 1080 60p with a large sensor would look like.

Don Palomaki October 17th, 2011 08:00 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
A lot of discussion about frame rates, p vs. i, etc.

First and foremost - shoot with the final product and client in mind. We can dream of that illusive "film look" but if that does not matter to the client, is there any point in chasing it if it adds cost you cannot bill (except perhaps for personal gratification)? Why give a Rolex to a pig when it can do equally well with a Timex? (OK, I accept that some lurkers may have fashion pigs.)

What is important? My take on it is: Good audio, good shot composition, tight editing, on time delivery, and video that is acceptably (which does not mean totally) noise free considering the field conditions under which it was shot.

Slow shutter speeds or frame rates maker for stuttery motion and really bad pans/tilts. The early days of TV settled on 60i/50i to deal with issues of power line frequency, available bandwidth and acceptable motion. Film at 24 FPS was the minimal that produce acceptable motion on the big screen, and that requires skilful camera work. Faster frame rates eat film, increase cost.

Jeff Harper October 17th, 2011 08:16 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
Don, no matter how long I live I am astounded at learning how most everything comes down to money.

Your statement is fascinating, is it true? 24fps was selected as a way to save money? That just blows my mind.

I have NEVER understood the fascination with 24p. DOF with great lenses seems to me to be much more critical in achieving a great look much more so than frame rate.

Now I DO get the fascination with progressive at any speed, it is fantastic to me in comparison to interlaced, and I've seen some amazing 24p wedding videos, but it would seem the lenses and the shots, exposure, etc are what take them over the top, not the frame rate.

Don Palomaki October 17th, 2011 09:01 AM

Re: panasonic TM900 vs Canon HF G10
 
48 fields per second (24 Frames Per Second with a 2-blade shutter, or 16 FPS with a 3 blade shutter) was selected as the sweet spot for film projection (by Edison I'm told) where there was little to be gain by increasing beyond it. This is based in large part on how the eye-brain sees motion. 24 FPS was standardized for sound.

Film use is proportional to frame rate. 24 FPS uses 50% more film than 16 FPS, and thus film cost is 50% more. So if 24 FPS gave satisfactory motion an sound, why go to, say, 30 FPS if the cost increases by 25% with no additional benefit at the box office. After all - it is a business. These rates for film were standardized before TV.

Video at 25 or 30 FPS was in part to avoid a beat/interfenence with power line frequencies in the early days.

And of couirse the other part of setting a standard is getting all players (or at least the important ones) to agree to it.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 07:02 PM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2025 The Digital Video Information Network