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Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
I'm sorry David. Rather than start another OT thread -- which this is t0 some degree -- I tossed my observations on the NEX into it.
The way it connected -- was not stated. Bottom-line, if I had to buy a camcorder right now I would go with the JVC PX10 because of it's amazing detail. BUT, I won't buy it because -- like the NEX series -- it simply can't handle "normal" NV or India sunlight. This failure suggests that 12-bit RAW may be necessary in addition to fine detail and shallow DOF. Of course, an F3 is beyond many of our budgets. So, I've been posting about what would be at the $3000 to $6000. I don't think Japan is going to give us that, although maybe the Canon 5D III comes close. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
I'd be REALLY careful about using those video "tests" from UTooB... there are some pretty obvious methodology flaws... MP4?!?! at 1440x1080?? And the first video just plain looks out of focus in several spots, with improperly set exposure (Sonys need to be pulled back a bit on exposure... nature of the beast).
I don't have the NEX5n (though if I decide to "test" the E mount waters, it's a logical choice), but Sony designed these to shoot 1080 60p - THAT would be a proper side by side, and not reduced/degraded resolutions... As for the handling of high brightness situations, I think you have to consider a variable ND for most any of these big chippers! Thanks for the reminder, as I've got an SLT-A65 inbound (darn vintage Minolta glass collection!). Cheapest way I found to get hands on the new 24Mpixel sensor! |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
The point is not one or two comps, but watching many as one would watch a BD 1080p movie -- on a big HDTV. The NEX images simply are less clear than that from other cameras. The lens does matter -- the terribly soft NEX in the church is the 16mm pancake. Go to any PHOTO review and the comments are IT'S SOFT. But Sony had to know that because it tried a revision before shipping.
Tonight I looked at Panasonic GH2 and it matched the clarity of the 5D II, but with no aliasing. Once again this is what others say, but until I could feed 1080p to an HDTV I saw no point at looking. Yes, an ND filter is a must, but does nothing about dynamic range. Without sensor, processing, and codec dynamic range -- all one can do is bring the brights down to prevent over-exposure -- while crushing the rest of the picture. (And, looking at the aliasing, why do you want 24MP?) Of course, if the VGs had proper CAMCORDER controls one could adjust knee to help. (Better to have no knee and record either log 10 bit or 12-bit RAW.) PS: The GH2 looks far better when it's been hacked to record at 65Mbps and even better when running at 176Mbps. Amazing detail increases. Which may be why the JVC at 36Mbps looks so clear. As I said earlier, I think a whole bunch of video shooters followed Sony down a carefully guided path to big chips -- for shallow DOF -- only for some to realize that many other critical shooting aspects were sacrificed to keep the FS100 safe. They've given us a great sensor and that's it. But, attach a $1000 Atomos ProRes 422 recorder, an adaptor for all those fine Minolta lenses, run full manual, and I suspect you've got an FS100 at a far lower cost. :) An alternative is what's looking like a great buy -- the GH2 hacked to about 65Mbps. PS: Watching the Digital Bolex samples last night, for better or worse, they look just like what I used to shoot. This could be a very fun camera! |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
I own both the Canon 5D II, and the Sony VG 20. I will confess that I have had other things going on since I bought on the first day the Sony was available, so testing was limited to a few situations, but I feel I can comfortably make a judgement between the two.
I use the same lens system on both cameras, with the exception of course, of the Sony stock zoom. In testing I have done, I have no doubt that the Sony VG20 has a little bit more low light capability than the 5D, and that in the low light situations, its not near as noisy. In addition, the noise seem to be a fine grain on the VG20, as a opposed to the more blooming looking grain in the 5D. In a normal lighting situation, the cameras come closer. However, I think the VG20 resolves better, in tests with a two sister Nikons, a 35mm for the VG20, and a 50mm for the 5DII, I showed the Canon resolving somewhere around 550 lines while the Vg20 resolved around 700. As a result, images appear to provide finer detail in foliage and background. (Of course some of that might be attributable to the shallower depth of field in the 5DII.) |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
I saw several 5D II tests where the shallow DOF made the background go very soft.
Your number seem right for the VG because it is somewhat less than the FS100 which is somewhat less than the F3. All these cameras are less than provided by the EX3 -- at 1000. Of course, you were using a Nikon lens. Your number seems wrong for the 5D. It seems unlikely a camera that can capture only 550 lines could be used by filmmakers when the RED provides 1600 lines (1.78:1). 550 is HDV resolution! My GUESS would be your Nikon lens is not as good as the lenses those shooting with the 5D normally use. But, in any case, my point is that capturing 1000 to 1600 lines yields a picture that is significantly clearer. And, log 10 bit 4:4:4 RAW or 12 bit 4:4:4 RAW record dynamic range and color that 24Mbps AVCHD can't. I feel the market is shifting away from looking at only chip size and toward lens-quality and avoiding low bit rate codecs -- or codecs entirely. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
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Steve, I think it your numbers seem a bit high. Attached is a chart Zacutto did in the shootout in 2011. But I am ready to be schooled if we are talking about different things. The charts in the shoot out were shoot with lenses that were capable of resolving 4000 lines.
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Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
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And for a 1080 sytem camera, the absolute maximum it could resolve is 1080 lpph. If you fed any more into it, and saw a result, it's aliasing. A bad thing. A 1080 camera CANNOT resolve better than 1080 lpph, and in practice 1000 lpph is more desirable and realistic. It's also not the whole story by any means to just give a figure for the resolution and leave it at that. As example, look at Alan Roberts zone plate for the 5D - http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/rd/pubs/w...on_5D_DSLR.pdf . At what point does the "real" resolution die away and the aliasing take over. If you pointed it at a chart with 1200lpph I'm sure it would give a result - but an undesirable, aliased one. It should give plain grey for an "ideal" 1080 camera. I'm very sceptical of many of the figures in the Zacuto chart, and for another example take the AF100 figure of 509 line pairs measured resolution (=1018 lpph). That is complete nonsense. Look at Adam Wilts comparisons of the F3 and the AF100. Look at the first chart and especially the horizontal or vertical lines in the wedge. At the outside, they are converging (as on the original chart) but around 650 lpph they start to DIVERGE. The lines on the chart don't do that in reality, of course - the result proves the AF100 aliases above about 650 lpph. (Adam quotes 680 lpph, which I'd say was a bit lenient, but we're in the same ballpark.) That's equivalent to 325 line pairs (340 with Adams figures). You can see from the chart just how ridulous the Zacuto figure of 509 line pairs is. It equates to 1018 on Adams chart - or just inside the 1000 line ring. What should be very fine horizontal and/or vertical lines are very coarse and blurred there - nothing like the chart original. (Compare with the F3.) Even more distinct is the next wedge with lines at 22 deg to the axis - instead of the fine radial lines of the chart the aliasing has turned it in to lines at 90 deg to what they should be!! 509 line pairs my *&^?*.........! |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
Just to make it more fun -- in the cinema world with different aspect-ratios. So only the horizontal resolution is measured, in LINES.
So a RED measures 3200 LINES. If you divide by1.78 for a 16:9 ratio, it falls to about 1800 Lines p/height. For a 3 chip cameras, 1000TVL/ph is the maximum. UPDATE: Curious about tests I found this. "In our test, the PX10 was able to record a horizontal sharpness of 900 lw/ph and a vertical sharpness of 800 lw/ph—both of which are excellent results. Looking back at the performance crops on our Color and Noise page, you can see how sharp the image captured by the PX10 really is." When you consider this is a single chip camera, 900 is amazing! If you ignore the 1.78:1 aspect ratio, it's 1068 LINES. Now if JVCs QuadHD camera doubles this, that's about 2000 lines. Of course, 36Mbps doesn't hurt either for shooting 1080p60. I think I'm coming to a personal conclusion. I want SUPER clarity with ZERO image artifacts. Lo-light and MINIMUM DOF just are not my concern. And, while I see the need for a film look for narrative work, I've just never been interested. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
My experience is based on some personal testing and experience.
David Heath said: "One point about that chart is the units used: "Line PAIRS per picture height". It's more usual to talk about "lines per picture height" - lpph. Hence 540 Line pairs per picture height means the same thing as 1080 lines per picture height." I had assumed this to be just a difference in terminology over and not a difference in the actual measurement. No matter what though, the numbers in in the Zacutto testing reporting present a scale for the different cameras which is consistent with my experience. I have test shot foliage in wide angle shots and other fine detail objects, using stills and grab frames from video with my Canon 5D. Whatever the reason, its just not that good with that fine detail in which to me echos the resolution testing. I don't really care about pixel counting and numbers, I just look at what I see. There is absolutely no doubt that my Nikon primes have the resolving power necessary to meet any video need when you compare the stills to the video grabs and so the real issue with the 5D Mark II is resolving power of the chip, and of course, any thing the camera does to create the final video file. I have always felt that the pure DSLR video shooters were over emphasizing things in expressing their desire to shoot with the absolute highest resolution and best lenses. It seemed to me that for pure video purposes, medium quality lenses with proper chromatic aberation correction will do as well as well as the expensive L line lenses.. Steve Mullen said: "I think I'm coming to a personal conclusion. I want SUPER clarity with ZERO image artifacts. Lo-light and MINIMUM DOF just are not my concern. And, while I see the need for a film look for narrative work, I've just never been interested. " I have to agree that is exactly what the video for film debate is all about. I feel that the push to 4k will actually result in the loss of film feel for many applications. I saw "Acts of Valor", the film shot 70% with the 5DMark II, about three years about, even before the camera had 24p capability, as I recall. As a lowly operator who has used the camera, I saw some of the issues I had experienced with this camera. It certainly was not perfect. But next to me on each side, were friends or family that have no connection with the camera or film making, and I never heard one thing about lack of focus, or poor highlight or shadow detail or bad dynamic range. They just enjoyed the film for what it was. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
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But as far as the 5D2 goes then there's a zone plate at http://thebrownings.name/WHP034/imag...zone-plate.png At a glance, the resolution looks to be about 500 lines (250 line pairs) but it's pretty obvious that's far from the whole story. It's not just that it may be a bit softer than the AF100, but it's the really bad COLOURED aliasing that is likely to give the worst differences. The AF100 aliasing is not good, but at least it's monochrome. Matters like that don't register in things like the simple Zacuto tables. Quote:
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Why can't we have the gripping story shot with the better camera? Two completely separate issues which shouldn't be confused. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
Sitting staring at a line of cameras on my desk... which is the "better" camera? Shouldn't one be obviously superior for EVERY use? Why all these different cameras? HMMM... I know some of them will be "going" and a couple are "new", so I've got to take the time to see what they can really do...
I'll postulate that there are design limits for EVERY camera, such that each camera meets a need or a few needs, but one won't do "everything". Super sharp images are "great", but then you discover the "talent" wants "soft skin" so their "reality" isn't so obviously showing. Then there's moire and aliasing... I think the "average consumer" wants a camera that as accurately as possible "captures" the moment - the colors (maybe a bit more vibrantly than they really were, so the "memory" is more vivid), the little details, and of course most of the time great images in BAD lighing conditions... They aren't interested in "grading", funky blue green or orange "film like" color casts, or "special effects". If it fits in your pocket, even better! That's ONE "market"... Someone fancying themselves as a "filmmaker" may have an entirely different set of "wants" - "flatter" footage that they can toy with easier in post, artsy DoF, and of course they have a lighting and sound "crew"... pocketability optional... As I look at these cameras I'm considering for "thinning from the herd", I realize each has strengths and weaknesses, it's charms and foibles. Not a one is "perfect", at least not for "every" purpose or possible use. It comes back to the truth that the "best" camera is the one you are comfortable using, the one you'll have with you when the "content" appears, and the one that captures a solid, technically "usable" image and sound when you ask it to. It's a tool to capture "content"... if one doesn't do it, there's probably a dfferent one that will, or if they can't do it yet, give it time (presuming you want to wait to capture your "content" rather than getting it NOW). |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
"Then there's moire and aliasing... "
With most of the DSLRs there seems to these artifacts. Here's a test of the NEX-5n: "We found that the NEX-5N was able to consistently reproduce around 700 lw/ph of horizontal sharpness, and around 650 lw/ph of vertical sharpness. The camera hit much higher highs than that (it occasionally touched in the 1000 lw/ph, which is ridiculous for an APS-C camera sampling down to an HD signal), but between 750 and 950 lw/ph frequencies, the camera produced a circular banding error that was incredibly distracting." "incredibly distracting" is what I see, that seems even worse from the 24MP NEX-7. So, I'm a bit concerned Sony will push the 24MP into the VG30 for marketing reasons. But why no aliasing with the JVC cameras? One thought is the 12MP 4:3 sensor is only 9MP when using a 16:9 window. In the PX10, the image is "converted" to 2MP. In the HMQ10, the image is "converted" to 8MP. Fundamentally, with QuadHD each image is simply recorded. That's exactly like taking photos at 60fps! I suspect the DSP is simply downscaling 9MP to 2MP -- which makes me wonder if the other cameras are still dropping lines. Perhaps dropping pairs -- to keep the Bayer pattern -- but dropping nevertheless. The Canons used to drop every fifth line which is really bad. PS: 4K2K will eliminate the need for edge enhancement (ringing) so the images will look more like film -- not less. That's why film has high resolution and yet "nice" edges. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
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I suspect it may have been by a method which wasn't distinguishing between true resolution and aliasing, and if all you've got is a pattern of horizontal and vertical lines that is difficult. (Hence the value of zone plates and the "trumpets" such as on the chart Adam used. The further comment about "circular banding error" reinforces that idea. I suspect they were never seeing any "real" resolution above about 700 lpph - just aliasing - but didn't realy recognise it for what it was. Quote:
GBGB GBGB GB RGRG RGRG RG GBGB GBGB GB RGRG RGRG RG GBGB GBGB GB RGRG RGRG RG GBGB GBGB GB RGRG RGRG RG etc, where only the photosites in bold are read. It follows you can expect little coloured aliasing, quite high luminance aliasing, and a sensitivity reduction of around 2 stops compared to what would be the case if the whole chip was being used. And resolution equal to a quarter of the total photosite count. For 16:9 and 12 megapixel, the numbers are going to be something like 4608x2592 (=11,943,936) so you'd expect a measured resolution of about 2592/4 lpph or about 650 lpph. Which strangely enough is pretty well what we're seeing from the AF100. (It would also give an interim 1152x648 image to be scaled up to 1080 or 720 - and it's easier to scale up than down.) Such an approach would also be expected to give a symmetrical result (equal H & V performance, unlike the 5D) - exactly as with the AF100) The 2x2 read out approach is a very good one, but it is obviously far best used with a chip of dimensions of 3840x2160 (as the C300 does) with no need for line or column skipping. In that case there is full resolution, no need for up/downconversion, and you can expect full predicted sensitivity for the chip size. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
If you use Adam's resolution testing method -- and the only one I believe in -- you slowly move the camera side-to-side to reveal those camera that use use smaller than HD chips -- which used to be very common with Pana's HD camcorders.
Therefore, one will see a changing resolution changing as the columns move across the chart. In general you can take the average -- although I suppose one could take the lowest value. In any case -- the problem is the artifacts that they see and are present on ALL NEX video. Bottom-line, if you do not want to see artifacts you must not choose a hybrid where high photo taking resolution is the camera's main task. That includes the VGs because they are photo cameras in a different body. That means you need a camera designed to provide the best video. The joke on Sony and Canon and Nikon is that a camera doesn't need more than 9- to 12MP for good photos. Who prints photos anymore? They go to the web. So JVC's approach of 16:9 9MP may indeed yield softer photos than a NEX when measured, but in reality on the web where I watch them on a 1920x1080 HDTV -- that's not going to matter even after cropping. It's marketing not photo shooters that are pushing to 36MP! To my mind the camera makers have it backward. Aim for highest video quality! Aim for video shooting ease. The E-mount is dead without the ability to have ND filters in the camera. All Panasonic has to do is drop the GH2/3 into a camcorder body and the VGs are done with. MINIMUM DOF is simply not that big a deal. (I assume there will be a better chip for a GH3.) PS: Skipping row and column pairs is a great way to reduce data by 4X. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
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Hence, the limit of "true" resolution is the highest value that behaves as it should. Disregard anything that "moves backwards"! Quote:
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Obviously, it's capable of high quality stills. But read in the same way as the C300 it's also capable of full 4k (actually quad-HD) with relatively straightforward processing. Furthermore, by reading 4x4 blocks directly, instead of 2x2, similar processing should yield excellent 1080 directly. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
"Almost. I believe the reason for doing what you describe is to separate aliases from "real" resolution. On a static shot it's difficult to tell which is which - pan from side to side and the "real" lines move as you'd expect - aliases "ripple backwards".
Exactly. The camcorders that use H green-shift and those that use H and V Green-shift provide a mix of real resolution and aliasing. Adam's tests reveal -- as you explained -- a way of seeing what the actual resolution is. ---------- I wonder if Canon has a patent on it's super-pixel design? They read-out two rows at once and so the output needs no processing to get an RGB value for a pixel. The Sony F65 also reads-out 2 rows at a time, but with their diagonal pattern I have the sense they use DSP to calculate an RGB pixel. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
The FS100 firmware has been delayed and now this rumor:
"According to multiple sources Sony is preparing a big product announcement event for early April. I don’t have the exact date yet but my sources told me there will be multiple new products for NEX and SLT (photo cameras, *camcorders* and lenses).There are so many new products I have heard of, the *NEX-F3 a new NEX camcorder* and the new 18-135mm SAM lens" An SLT camcorder would allow phase detection AF while shooting. Perhaps with an A-mount not E-mount. Would an ND filter then be possible? We know the wonderful F3 -- would Sony dare release an E-mount version? If so, what would happen to the FS100? PS: Consumer Products & Services Group (“CPSG”) and Professional Device & Solutions Group (“PDSG”) to be abolished on April 1st. Could this mean the "protectionism" of the pro group will be removed letting the best designs go to market? (In Japan, a store sells all models it thinks their customers will want. There is no consumer vs pro distinction.) This might mean the far more competent pro marketing group in NYC would take over from the not so good consumer group in CA. The "One Sony" slogan may help all of us. |
Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
Japanese products are going to get more expensive. Simple $/yen ratio PLUS need to increase profits. We might get better features at a higher price.
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Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
That and the sadly sagging dollar doesn't help... but it's all relative anyway!
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Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
Though..in the defence of the Nex 5n it has considerably less aliasing and moire compared to the 7d that I have. Shot some wide material with an f-stop of 8-11 and it looked pretty good. Way better than what the Canon was doing.
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Re: New NEX camcorder on March 31?
For video, the inexpensive NEX-5n makes perfect sense. The photo reviewers are all very happy with the NEX-7 because it shoots fantastic photos. Sme guys are removing the OLPF to get even more detail!
There is an inherent conflict between photo and video -- with today's technology. |
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