DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   Sony ENG / EFP Shoulder Mounts (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/sony-eng-efp-shoulder-mounts/)
-   -   Any news on the Sony PMW 500 (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/sony-eng-efp-shoulder-mounts/486315-any-news-sony-pmw-500-a.html)

Simon Denny October 19th, 2010 02:13 AM

Any news on the Sony PMW 500
 
Has anyone bought or tried out the Sony PMW 500. I would love to hear some feed back on this camera.

Cheers

Tom Bostick October 22nd, 2010 09:02 PM

Alister got his hands on one
XDCAM-USER.com Sony PMW-500 Review.

Simon Denny October 22nd, 2010 11:52 PM

Thanks Tom,

I have already checked Alister's blog along with some other reviews on line. I was hoping that the 500 has been released and someone was using this on a daily basis to get some feed back on.

Cheers

Ned Soltz November 12th, 2010 09:07 PM

I'm in line to get one for review from Sony hopefully the week of 11/15

I'll post when I've had the chance to take it for a spin.

Simon Denny November 17th, 2010 10:08 PM

I'm trying to find info on the PMW500 with it's over & under cranking abilities.
Does the 500 achieve this in 1280x720? or is this full HD 1920x 1080i

Thanks

Ned Soltz November 24th, 2010 08:16 PM

Just got the 500 but have not yet unpacked.

More over the next week...

Simon Denny November 25th, 2010 04:18 AM

Hi Ned,

Unpack that camera now please.... he,he,he
Man I'm so close to getting this and I await your review of this new little beast.

Cheers

Oh I forgot,

What lens are you going to use with this Ned?

Uli Mors November 25th, 2010 08:39 AM

its similar to ex cameras:

1920x1080 25/30p can be UNDERCRANKED (set to 1-30fps)

1280x720 25p can be under & overcranked (set 1-60fps)

Regards

Uli

Ned Soltz November 25th, 2010 01:03 PM

All unpacked and getting started with set up.

Sony shipped me the Fujinon HA18x lens with manual focus/servo zoom.

First impression can definitely confirm Alister's excellent video review.

The camera is amazingly light-weight with menus/controls that are much more like PMW series (great for me since I have an EX1 and EX3).

The monochrome viewfinder is sharp and the LCD screen is the same as the EX-1.

I have not used any of my own SxS cards since Sony sent me 1x 64gb and 2 x 8gb. Note that to record HD 422 50 Mbps, cards must be formatted UDF. I inserted one of Sony's 8 gb cards and got an incompatible format msg. So, I would presume it was formatted Fat32 for XDCAM EX. When I tried to reformat card in camera, got a msg that could not complete operation. I'll read the manual and see what I can figure out.

I'll do some shooting with it over the week and then alas either have to return it to Sony or disappear to a country that does not have an extradition treaty with the US.

Paul Cronin December 1st, 2010 04:02 PM

Ned,

Any more info on the PMW-500 you are testing?

Simon Denny December 1st, 2010 08:38 PM

Hi Ned,
Now that you have had the PMW 500 for the weekend how did it go?

Cheers

Ned Soltz December 2nd, 2010 08:10 PM

I have enjoyed evaluating the 500. It is lightweight and balanced. Monochrome viewfinder is sharp and focusing is a snap. Of course, with CCDs, not a trace of jello-vision or flash banding. The one thing I was not able to do owing both to schedule and weather was take it to Times Square at night to check for CCD smearing.

I find it somewhat peculiar that it does not have histogram, WFM or any other kinds of scopes. Yes, zebras.

It only draws 29 watts, so that's 3 hrs from the smallest info lithium battery.

The 64gb SxS card holds about 2 hrs of XDCAM HD 50 mbps 422. Writes to a UDF format. No problem with FCP importing the MXF files using most recent version of Sony XDCAM Transfer. Remember on the Mac side to install the UDF drivers after installing the SxS drivers.

In response to another question on the thread, I can confirm that it does Slow & Quick motion in oth 720 and 1080 modes.

It just feels to me like a nice, solid conservative choice. Nothing really bleeding edge. Just solid with a nice image and will be an excellent top of the line choice for those who shoot XDCAM. Suitable for ENG EFP uses or commercials, reality TV.

Finishing the full review now.

Ned

Simon Denny December 3rd, 2010 05:11 AM

Thanks ned,
Look forward to the rest of the review.
Cheers

Paul Cronin December 3rd, 2010 08:27 AM

I did not know it did over-cranking in 720p and 1080p or am I reading Ned's post wrong?

Steve Phillipps December 3rd, 2010 09:15 AM

Yes it does it just like the EXs, 1-30 in 1080 and 1-60 in 720. Presumably requires a power down to change though. I'd be very interested to know which gives better overall results - the half vertical res 60fps in the F800 or the 720/60P in the 500. I wonder how the missing lines of the 800 will react when put through grading and the transmission chain.
Steve

Simon Denny December 3rd, 2010 12:57 PM

Yeah, I asked this question in another forum about Slow & Quick motion. 1080p is great if this is true.
Also strange that the 500 has no histogram, I can get by without it but it's a bit odd.

Ned, what's the peaking colour used on the 500?

Cheers

Paul Cronin December 3rd, 2010 01:14 PM

Steve never used the 1080 60fps on my F800 since I did not upgrade FCP to view it.

Simon it is weird why Sony pulled the histogram, i never really used it.

Simon Denny December 3rd, 2010 01:32 PM

I found this from the Sony brochure.
I remember reading this but must have thought 720p only for S&Q

Slow & Quick Motion Function
The PMW-500 offers a powerful Slow & Quick Motion
function that enables users to create elegant fastand
slow-motion footage. The PMW-500 can
capture images at frame rates selectable from 1 fps
(frame per second) to 60 fps in 720p mode and from
1 fps to 30 fps in 1080p mode, in increments of 1
fps*1.
*1: With the PAL setting in UDF (MXF) mode, frame rates are
selectable up to 50 fps in 720p mode and up to 25 fps in 1080p
mode.


More the same on this:

Slow & Quick Motion
function
720p: Selectable from 1 fps to 60 fps as recording frame rate*
(from 1 fps to 50 fps in the case of Pal Area Setting in the UDF Mode)
1080p: Selectable from 1 fps to 30 fps as recording frame rate
(from 1 fps to 25 fps in the case of Pal Area Setting in the UDF Mode)

Doug Jensen December 3rd, 2010 04:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Phillipps (Post 1594556)
I wonder how the missing lines of the 800 will react when put through grading and the transmission chain. Steve

I can answer that. 1080 slow-mo looks absolutely fantastic on the F800 and you'd have a real hard time telling that the footage wasn't full resolution. If you want to compare 720 slow-mo on an EX camera vs. 1080 slow-mo on an F800, you'd see a difference.

Doug Jensen December 3rd, 2010 05:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Cronin (Post 1594637)
Simon it is weird why Sony pulled the histogram, i never really used it.

They didn't. See post #25.

Doug Jensen December 3rd, 2010 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Simon Ash (Post 1594634)
Ned, what's the peaking colour used on the 500?

See post #24.

David Heath December 3rd, 2010 06:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Doug Jensen (Post 1594699)
None of Sony's high-end cameras have a histogram function because zebras, when properly used, are so much more accurate and useful for setting exposure.

Yes, I fully agree. A histogram may be fine for setting exposure on a fixed scene, but pretty useless when there's a lot of movement - they totally obscure too much of the image!

Learning how to use zebras properly is a much steeper learning curve than for histogram, but once learnt they are far superior for the reason above.

Alister Chapman December 3rd, 2010 08:57 PM

You can put a 350 finder, with colour peaking on a 500. But you can't buy a 500 with the 350 style VF, or buy a 350 style VF on it's own at this time.

The PMW-500 has more in common with the 350 in terms of image processing, monitoring functions etc than the 700/F800.

Doug Jensen December 3rd, 2010 10:26 PM

I almost forgot that I have a PMW-500 owners manual.
Yes, it has colored peaking -- if you want it.

Peaking Type Normal/Color/Both:
Selects the peaking type.

Normal: Normal peaking
Color: Color peaking
Both: Both

Peaking Color White/Red/Yellow/Blue When the Peaking Type setting is Color,
selects the peaking color from among
White, Red, Yellow, and Blue.

Doug Jensen December 3rd, 2010 10:29 PM

The PMW-500 does have a histogram function. From the manual:

Histogram Display On/Off Turns the histogram display of video
signal levels on or off (in HD mode only).


Any other questions that might be answered in the manual??
I can't share a copy, but I'll be happy to look things up.

Simon Denny December 4th, 2010 03:14 AM

Thanks Doug,
Good info on that.

Cheers,
Simon

Steve Phillipps December 4th, 2010 03:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Doug Jensen (Post 1594694)
I can answer that. 1080 slow-mo looks absolutely fantastic on the F800 and you'd have a real hard time telling that the footage wasn't full resolution. If you want to compare 720 slow-mo on an EX camera vs. 1080 slow-mo on an F800, you'd see a difference.

Yes, but I was wondering about after grading and particularly through transmission. How does your stuff look in slomo on broadcast?
I know that the half horizontal rez slomo looks pretty good as I had an F355 a while back and it is really impressive. Certainly not true to say as some have that you can't tell the difference between normal speed and slomo, you can, no question about that, but the difference is no way near as huge as you might expect.
I suppose if the interpolatiob algorythm in the 355 800 is absolutely superb that could be the reason why it looks better than the specs would suggest - I presume there is software interpolation going on in camera?
It's still a little surpising that it'd look better than native 720 though - after all if that was the case why not just shoot you slomo in 1080i and de-interlace slomo in post?
Steve

David Heath December 4th, 2010 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Phillipps
Yes, but I was wondering about after grading and particularly through transmission. How does your stuff look in slomo on broadcast?

I'd assume no different to normal speed, if the recording data rate rises with overcrank rate. So for half speed footage, double the recorded frame rate and data rate to 50fps and 100Mbs respectively, and playback is then still from a standard XDCAM422 50Mbs recording.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Phillipps
It's still a little surpising that it'd look better than native 720 though - after all if that was the case why not just shoot you slomo in 1080i and de-interlace slomo in post?

That may apply vertically - but horizontally you're talking about the difference between 1920 and 1280 luminance samples, respectively for 720 and 1080 working. (And 960 and 640 chrominance.)

Alister Chapman December 5th, 2010 10:41 PM

Hmmm... I'm not sure you get the same data rate increase with XDCAM HD as you do with XDCAM EX when overcranking. We know that with an EX the data rate of 35Mb/s is actually the playback rate, so if you shoot at 720P25, overcranked to 50fps the playback data rate ends up at 35Mb/s which implies that the recording is 70Mb/s. This is one of the reasons why you have issues with SD cards etc when overcranking.

But with the optical discs on a 700/F800 this would mean recording at 100Mb/s when overcranking and this is beyond (AFAIK) the capabilities of the single laser deck used in the cameras, which maxes out at about 90 Mb/s and can only go upto about 70Mb/s for sustained recordings. Given that the 500 recording formats are 100% optical disc compatible (in UDF mode) this would suggest the same recording bit rate limitations. So I speculate that the recorded bit rate is not doubled as with the EX, which is why the resolution is halved vertically.

The implication is that an EX shooting 2x overcrank is less compressed than a F800 at the same speed.

Doug Jensen December 6th, 2010 06:06 AM

Putting speculation about data rates aside, in the real world, there is absolutely no question that 1080 slow-mo from my F800 looks superior to 720 slow-mo from my EX1 on a 1080P timeline. If I had the choice between both modes on a 500, there's no question which one I'd choose to use.

Paul Cronin December 6th, 2010 08:39 AM

Fully agree with you Doug,

The slow motion off the 800 at 1920x540 60p looks fantastic and much better then 720p 60p off the EX1/3 for more reasons then bit rate.

Alister do you still own your 700? Or do you use the 350? Or both?

Steve Phillipps December 6th, 2010 08:46 AM

Doug, Paul, that's interesting to know. Although of course the chips and processing that make 720 in the PMW500 and PDW700 won't be same as the EX cameras and that could make a difference.
Steve

Paul Cronin December 6th, 2010 11:05 AM

Agree Steve,

I would think the chips and color spacing have a lot to do with it.

Simon Denny December 6th, 2010 12:37 PM

Hi Ned,
How has the 500 performed for you? It would be great to hear more from you.

Cheers

David Heath December 6th, 2010 01:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alister Chapman (Post 1595317)
Given that the 500 recording formats are 100% optical disc compatible (in UDF mode) this would suggest the same recording bit rate limitations. So I speculate that the recorded bit rate is not doubled as with the EX, which is why the resolution is halved vertically.

Interesting....... Does anyone have access to a PMW500, who can try recording a minutes worth normal, and a minute of 2x overcrank. And then compare filesizes?

Paul Cronin December 6th, 2010 03:32 PM

David I would be happy to test that out when I have access to a demo from Abel. We are trying to work out a date for this now.

David Heath December 6th, 2010 06:34 PM

That would be very good Paul.

Alister - it does occur to me that if the PMW500 behaved similarly to the EX (so a 2x overcrank gets recorded at 100Mbs), the resulting file could still be 100% optical disc compatible (in UDF mode). Dub it across to an XDCAM deck, and there need be no difference (as far as the deck sees it) between such a file and one shot without overcrank. The recording rate restrictions of the disc need only limit the transfer speed in this case - not the datarate of the file whilst filming or for normal playback.

So it's conceivable the 500 may have an advantage in this respect over the 700 or 800?

But the only way to be sure is to try it.......

Alister Chapman December 6th, 2010 08:07 PM

I agree that the 500 should be able to write to a SxS card at 100Mb/s and that the clip should then play back correctly if dubbed to an optical disc. But it would not meet the specifications for an XDCAM HD file AFAIK.

I might be completely wrong, it is just speculation, as has been said the only way to find out would be with a test recording.

As for whether 1280x720 or 1920x540 looks better, well a lot depends on the scene. Landscapes and scenery will almost always look better at 1920x540 as they tend to have lots of horizontal information, but imagery with geometric patterns can look very strange at 1920x540 as you see the image softness across the vertical axis while the horizontal axis is twice as sharp. Rotating objects appear to cycle through soft and sharp due to the H/V imbalance, becoming visibly sharper as they pass through horizontal only to go soft again as they go vertical. I shot some flag twirling cheerleaders at a festival and you could see the flags going soft and sharp as the spun, very strange.

At the moment I'm concentrating on 3D so I only have a bunch of EX3's and EX1R's. I'm getting a pair of F3's as soon as they become available, so the 700 and 350 have gone as I have no use for them at the moment.

Ned Soltz December 6th, 2010 10:46 PM

Alas have to send the 500 back to Sony.

Very impressed with its performance as a production video camera.

Solved the problem of formatting the SxS card that I mentioned in an earlier post-- the card was locked. Duh.

Only one very strange concern, which I suspect is more related to FCP than to the 500. Shot some 720 23.98 footage to SxS cards. I have all most recent versions of FCP and XDCAM Transfer software. XDCAM Transfer reported that 23.98 footage as No Codec and would not import, even when I ticked the import without codec installed box in the prefs. It would preview the footage in XDCAM Transfer but not import.

I could import that same 23.98 footage into Avid MC5 and PPro CS5 and it would show up as 23.98.

Ned

Ned Soltz December 7th, 2010 08:28 AM

To Doug... Thanks for the historgram info. Really buried in the documentation and not referenced at all in the index.

Ned


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:47 PM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network