Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Dvd Camcorder?




Ruhel


which one should i buy a mini dv camcorder or a dvd camcorder, what i know is on a mini dv you can do long play and record upto 2 hours of video however is it true that on a dvd disk you can record only 30 mins? how much can you record on a dvd disk for a dvd camcorder and is there any thing like long play to make the 30 mins longer?


Answer
A MiniDV camcorder, consumer format, has standard and long-play recording times. Standard time matches the time on the tape, LP is 1.5x as long. Tapes are typically in 60min (12GB) and 80min (16GB.. some pro-quality tapes in 63min and 83min), so you can get about 120min (2 hours) on an 80min tape in LP mode.

The key here is that format-wise, DV is DV is DV... SP and LP modes record exactly the same quality video. There's also a professional mode, DVCAM, which also does, only yielding 40min on a 60min tape. The reasoning here is simple: faster recording yields a more reliable tape read-back.

On DVD, you're recording in MPEG-2 format to an 8cm DVD, which stores about 1.4GB of data. MPEG-2 certainly crunches down better than DV, but you're still talking a 10x advantage with the DV camcorder.. you do a bit better with the dual-layer 8cm DVDs, which store 2.6GB.

Like most "computer style" camcorders, the format is "just data", so it can be written at different rates. The top quality on any DVD camcorder is the maximum DVD video rate, which is about 9Mb/s. At this rate, you can fit about 19 minutes on a single sided DVD, 35 minutes on a dual-layer disc. This can be extended to 30 minutes (6Mb/s) or 60 minutes (3Mb/s), at the cost of quality. DV (depending on the camera) is better than the top quality here, though pretty comparable, particularly in a consumer camera, where the sensor and lens are also limiting factors.

The advantage to DVD, of course, is that you have that disc to play directly in your player... assuming, of course, your player is compatible with the disc format you're using (DVD-R, DVD-RDL, etc). However, DVD-R is the fastest growing camcorder format in the consumer market, having outsold DV in 2007... so this is likely to be popular enough. And pretty much all PCs read these, so your transfer for edit is very quick (though editing will be slower if you don't have a very fast PC).

Which brand mini camcorder is tops for performance/value + very cost effective please?




TuityFruit





Answer
We bought this mini-camcorder for our daughter for Christmas...


http://www.target.com/Aiptek-P-HD-Camcorder/dp/B001G70RRW/sr=1-1/qid=1230548077/ref=sr_1_1/183-0280896-4005658?ie=UTF8&index=target&rh=k%3Aaiptek&page=1

We found it at Target for $120 and bought a 4GB flash card for another $25.

The user interface is a little odd at first, but once you figure out what the designers had in mind, it's pretty simple. It takes stills, varying qualities of video, it has night-vision mode, can be used as a voice recorder, and I think it has an MP3 player built in.

We havn't uploaded anything to the PC yet, so I don't know how that will all go down. It comes with a disk/program but I'm gonna let Windows Media and Picasa have first crack at it.

For the price, all seems well so far.




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