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HPX 171 4:2:2 or EX3?
Hi all! As my first post Im just gonna go out and ask a question!
Im in the process of buying a new camera. I shoot mostly music videos and now moving on to commercials and short films, maybe documentaries... I'm thinking of buying either a Panasonic HPX 171 or a Sony EX3. I know this are two differently oriented cameras but the price difference (that was offered to me) between the EX1R and EX3 is negligible (700€). I can get a used but practically a new HPX for about 3500 € from a friend and a new EX3 for 7200 €. I've already shoot with the HPX and got satisfactory result but haven't tried the EX yet (but have seen loads of material shoot with it). The HPX is a great camera when shooting 720p but comparing it's 1080p to the EX 1080p is a no brainer to me (even if shoot on SxS - mpge2 35 Mbit). The problem here is: in a year - year and a half most of our TV stations are going HD. I'm inclined to buy the HPX but am worried about the broadcast quality of this camera. How much future proof is it - I can't really upgrade it, like I would the EX3 with buying the NanoFlash? I've thought about this and I think for me it comes down to this: the HPX shoots 4:2:2 in dvcpro hd and the EX 4:2:0 mpeg long gop or 4:2:2 iframe or long gop if using the Convergent designs NanoFlash. What I don't understand here is what is the actual chroma resolution of the HPX in 1080p or 720p due to the pixel shift it uses? In my calculations the HPX should have approximately the same chroma bit depth when shooting in 1080p comparing to the 1080p of the EX cams shoot with mpeg 2 35 Mbit long gop? Is this somewhat correct or am I way of here? By the logic I applied to get this calculation the HPX should be better for shooting 720p or SD. Or just shooting 720p or 1080p and then converting it to SD... Yes? If I decide to buy the EX I'll get the NanoFlash along with it. Maybe not right away but sooner or later. I just don't know if the extra price is worth it due to the questions I need answered... :) The EX3 + NanoFlash adds up to approximately 10500€. Oh yes I forgot - I plan on buying a DOF adapter to. Is it worth spending extra cash on a relay lens when using a camera that has a removable lens - in my case the EX3 or am I gonna get acceptable results with just using the HPX and its lens?? Please help, I just want to start creating again! All this technical reading and thinking is getting me crazy! :) Tank you! |
In my opinion there is no substitute for a larger sensor. All things being equal (or at least similar) a larger sensor gives lower noise, better sensitivity and higher dynamic range. This is why the EX cameras do so well compared to the competition. The EX1R and EX3 have full raster 1920x1080 sensors and the HDSDi output is 10 bit uncompressed.
In progressive the difference between 4:2:2 color space and 4:2:0 is extremely difficult to see. In interlace the difference is greater. The EX records marginally more pixels of color information at 1920x1080 4:2:0 compared to the HPX's 1280x720 4:2:2, but thats just numbers. In Europe many broadcasters are looking at following the guidelines for HD set by the EBU which are for a minimum of 1/2" sensors recording at minimum 50Mb/s. This can be achieved with an EX and nanoflash but not with the HPX. If you are worried about future proofing for HD broadcast then the EX may be the better camera. I would suggest if you shop around you should be able to get an EX1R with NanoFlash for less than 8000 euros plus VAT. Many dealers have stocks of the original EX1 for even less money. Rather than a DoF adapter I would look at a DSLR. The new Canon 550D is only around 800 Euros, about the price of a DoF adapter. |
Hi Alister! Yes, I've used a HPX - 7D combo just a week ago. I don't know... 2 cameras, to codecs, to diferent images... 7D was nice to use on the Glidecam 4000 though - wery light combo -> easy to use. I don't know - it's something to think about.
About the chroma subsampling: would you consider HPXs 1080p material broadcast quality? |
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The HPX is capable of *recording* 1080 samples of both luminance and chrominance vertically - but the chips can't deliver that level. Pixel shift improves LUMINANCE resolution - but can't do the same for chrominance. Hence you can expect (and get) about 540 lines vertically for chroma - same as the EX. [For the EX it's a bit like starting with 2 litres of water and trying to pour it into a 1 litre pot. (Half will overflow and be lost.) For the 171, you only start with 1 litre, then pour it in a 2 litre pot. You still only have 1 litre in both cases.] That's only a part of the story. Pixel shifting won't give equivalent luminance res to 1920x1080, it works out to about 1200x650 for 960x540 chips. Hence less vertical luminance resolution for the 171. But it's in the horizontal direction that the EX is the clear winner. The 171 and DVCProHD subsample the luminance to 1280 horizontally, and the 4:2:2 means 640 chroma samples horizontally. With the EX, it's 1920 for luminance, and 960 for chroma - and the difference really shows. Quote:
It's a different story horizontally. In 720 mode DVCProHD subsamples luminance to 960, and therefore the chroma is. With the EX, no subsampling, so 1280 for luminance and 640 for chrominance. Quote:
Draw your own conclusions. |
Ups, missed that one. Chroma res not bits!
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But for the down-conversion from HD to SD I just remembered: all the cameras shoot in one format and then convert the signal accordingly to the desired format selected, right? I don't know in which format EX shoots, but if it shoots in 1080p and then down-converts the signal to SD internally the chroma res of SD would be what? 720 x 576? That can't be right... I know that the HPX shoots in 1080 and then down-converts the signal to the selected format... I see that for future HD work the HPX probably isn't gonna cut it. At least not in 1080 res... But when HD gets more firmly established, cameras like the HPX or almost all 1/3" camers that use pixel shift wont be acceptable for HD broadcast? And coming from that statement, there should be a considerable price drop in such cams, don't you think so? |
You can pick up good used EX1's from dealers for less than 3000 euros. Add a NanoFlash for 2,500 euros and your all set. For SD set the EX1 to output SD over the HDSDi connector and record that using the NanoFlash set to IMX50. You will have full SD 4:2:2 colour and be recording using the very good, broadcast quality IMX50 codec.
Make a few optimizations in the picture profiles for SD (using HD detail settings doesn't work well) and you'll have a pretty respectable SD system that IMHO will be better than most small DV or DVCAM cameras. You will also have the advantage of being able to record HD in the camera and SD on the NanoFlash at the same time. When you want to move up to HD simply switch off the HDSDi downconvert and record on the NanoFlash at 50Mb/s or higher and your all set to make broadcast programmes. A quick reality check here though: While the EX1/nanoflash will meet with the EBU regulations, TV channels or commissioners may want a full size camera with expensive lenses for some projects, don't expect to just go out and make high end drama with an EX1. While it may well produce beautiful pictures you may be expected to use a high end camera on high end productions. The EBU guidelines are have been around for a year or so and so far have made no difference to the price of non EBU spec gear. There is, don't forget a huge market for HD in non broadcast applications. |
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Along comes vertical subsampling, and 4:2:0, and that means only half as many chroma samples as luminance. So still 1080 of luminance, but now down to 540 of chrominance. In practice it's not quite as simple as that, especially for interlace working. As far as the wider question goes, then I see the lowest res chips for HD (960x540, or 1/2 megapixel) not being sold much longer as new models are introduced. At that point, it's likely that such cameras will be seen as less attractive on the second hand market, and their price drop. Full 1920x1080 chips are increasingly seen as necessary if you're interested in going for broadcast, but I'd expect to see 1 megapixel chips around in new cheaper cameras for quite a while. They offer quite a good compromise in 1/3" cameras between resolution and sensitivity. Some things can be predicted more accurately than others from specs, and specs don't really give much idea as to how good downconversion will be. All the HD cameras have enough basic resolution to give a good SD in theory, doing downconversion well is not as easy as it may seem. It's important to filter all the fine detail off first, otherwise it just gives aliasing in the downconvert. (Too fine detail folds back as coarse artifacts.) If SD performance is important to you, (at least at the moment) I'd be inclined to look at the EX1R, rather than the EX1, which records it in camera. I have heard reports that the SD downconversion of the EX1 wasn't all that good - it was really intended more for monitoring than for programme use, it wasn't able to be recorded within the camera. The EX1R should be much better. Or shoot HD and downconvert to SD in software. |
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About DOF adaptors: does anybody have experience using a relay lens with a dof adapter? Is there really such a difference that justifies it's price (for low to mid end work)? |
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I think you answered yourself "why, then, ever bother shooting SD if you can do HD?" - and the answer must be to save time. News is the most obvious example, and a lot of channels ae likely to remain SD for a few years to come. The last thing they want is to have to spend time on downconversion, they need the cameras to shoot SD, period. (But may well want to buy new cameras now for reasons of solid state, and with the thought that they may be used HD in the future.) Quote:
Good downconversion should filter out the fine detail from the HD image before the downconversion process. In other words, electronically soften the HD signal to no better than SD quality BEFORE the actual downconversion. From what Alister says, it doesn't sound as if the EX1 real time downconversion does that. (Not normally a problem - just downconvert in software later.) |
Yes it is aliasing, I was just trying to use simple terms that everyone understands. My suggestion is to make the detail correction edges thicker (using the frequency adjustment) so they don't alias when converted to SD. Simply turning detail off is one option, but this leads to soft looking pictures, especially in SD. Optimising the detail settings for SD makes a dramatic difference to the perceived sharpness of any SD downconverts. The EX1/EX3 does do some interpolation during downconversion which reduces aliasing and produces a better downconvert than a non-antialiased conversion, but better results can be obtained with careful (slow?) downconversion in the edit. I did put up some examples of what happens if you don't anti-alias on my blog: XDCAM-USER.com Getting SD from HD and the problems of oversampling.
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Mind you, Alister, do we need to worry about all the aliasing given how accepting people are of footage from the DSLR's?! ;-)
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Well, very often you can get away with it, but as soon as you shoot something with a fine repeating pattern or texture it all goes rather nasty. Just point a vDSLR at a resolution chart and you get is a mess of colors and patterns that make it impossible to actually make a meaningful resolution measurement.
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At which point they blame somebody else. Aliasing's a bit like a virus - can pass a long way unnoticed, then pop up to cause a lot of harm. Maybe this is why there's a charge if you want the SD option on the PMW350? "Good enough" may be acceptable on a camera the price of the EX1 in a way it isn't on a full broadcast camera. |
Nice web site Alister!
I've heard something about a new EX cam coming out. Has anybody else heard something similar? |
I've not heard any rumors.
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EX3 Rumor
This appeared in one of the Cinematography.net discussion groups. This is the only mention of any possible upgrade to the EX3 that I've seen. Would be nice if they upgraded the EX-3 like they did the EX-1. I guess we will find out at NAB.
Below is the copy and paste from Cinemtography.net and the link: Message ______________ I heard rumors that the EX-3 will be updated around NAB but don't know for sure. It makes sense for them to update the EX-3 because the EX1R has solved the IR/far-red issue. Its also I believe a bit faster and records SD - All very significant upgrades so it really cuts into anyone's desire to buy an EX-3 if it doesn't have those upgrades. The IR issue is very big. I'd be surprised if Sony doesn't upgrade it, but who knows. Lenny Levy DP San Rafael, CA ________________ Hope this helps. Mark |
Hm... I've heard about a completely new camera, not an upgrade. But maybe, this is it. When is NAB?
Edit: oh, I see. 10-15 april :) |
It can be difficult to separate rumours based on fact from rumours based on speculaton by the time they've been repeated and repeated again.
And I can't claim to have any direct information or knowledge that isn't public. But I've speculated before that the announcement of the PMW350 and the upgrade of the EX1 to the EX1R leaves a big question mark over Sony's range regarding the EX3. The EX1R offers a number of significant advantages over the EX3 despite being cheaper - of which the IR aspect and SD recording are only two. I can't believe that EX3 salesman aren't having a lot of questions along the lines of "you expect me to pay a lot more than for the EX1R, but it won't do all those things the EX1R does.....?" But Sony have said "they have no plans to upgrade the EX3 in the same way as the EX1". Of course, that form of wording doesn't preclude them from discontinuing the EX3, and replacing it with a different model. My money would be on a 1/2" shouldermount, more nearly halfway between the EX1R and the 350, which would also be a direct competitor to Panasonics HPX300. If you don't have a direct need for a new camera NOW, it seems very sensible to wait and see what happens at NAB. That doesn't just apply to the Sony range - we know there's something coming from Canon, and Panasonics 171 is way overdue for replacement. |
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Guess I'm just gonna go with the used HPX and then sell it by the summers end. Getting an 8 months old, used 5 time HPX for 3k (from a friend) is still a good price for where I come from. And I probably won't have a problem selling it 6 months from now for approximately the same - a little less - amount of money. |
Sounds like a no brainer. While I like the Sony gears pictures I dislike the EX-3 ergonomics so I think you will find the HPX-170 much fun.
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IF they do, expect the value of used 171's to drop like a stone. Less people will want to buy them, and more will come on the market as users seek to replace them with whatever Panasonic comes up with - or EX's for that matter. You'll also be committing yourself to a workflow and peripherals, such as P2 cards, readers, etc. If in six months time, you decide the Sony route is the one for you, that could all mount up. I don't need a new camera yet - and I'm glad of that. If I had to get something now, it'd probably be an EX3, and a lot of the reasoning is 1/2" v 1/3" chips. That is the biggest single factor that makes a difference to the picture. Yes, the ergonomics aren't good, but then neither are those of the Ex1 or the HVX 171. At least the EX cameras have true manual lens. |
David, just one minor correction. The EX series including the new PMW350 all ship with an electronic servo lens. It's not a true manual although it behaves like one. It's servo focus and zoom. When you slide the focus ring into the manual position, it engages end stops making it feel and work like a manual connection, but if you switch off the power nothing moves.
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Tom, the focus is connected to a servo. But the zoom is fully mechanically manual.
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Thanks Simon.
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I know that Panasonic is showing a large sensor palmcorder at NAB, could be 2/3" or larger. It will most likely just be AVCCAM, not P2 DVCPRO HD or AVC-Intra, so more prosumer level. The recent reduction in the HPX170 price tells us that something is certainly coming by Fall.
If it has an HD SDI output, then one could use a nanoFlash with it to make up for the low-end codec. Too bad it doesn't have AVC-Intra 100 recording capability, Panasonic is obviously trying to keep the pricing down and leverage their prosumer technology. It seems that Panasonic is embracing CMOS going forward, which they were reluctant to do until the HPX300. Jeff Regan Shooting Star Video |
I hope that CCDs do not go away entirely. Until they deal with skew I just can't go all CMOS. These imagers for pro video use are still a work in progress in my mind even though they have some real positives.
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