Sony HDR-SR12
Posted by Dan Israel on Jan 31, 2009 in Video
I’d been waiting for the right combination of features to make the plunge to a high definition camcorder for personal use. I’ve been using the 3 CCD Sony HDR-FX1 for professional use, but it is too large to carry around for personal use.Enter the HDR-SR series. I won’t cover the specs – cause it’s been done…but this version is a 120 Gig internal hard drive. This new camera had everything I was interested in except, a 20x optical zoom and HDV versus AVCHD. The 20x just isn’t happening. I believe due to the sensor size and format, it’s just too expensive to produce this – for now. Nevertheless, the 12x smaller Carl Zeiss lens is very good.Waiting for HDV was ignorance on my part. I’m stunned how good AVCHD format looks. My first playback straight out of the camera (not compressed to DVD), left me speechless. And AVCHD’s storage capability is remarkable. I’ve been using the camcorder for personal footage for nearly six months. While I’ve downloaded everything, I’ve not erased anything from the camera’s internal hard drive. And it still has nearly 10 hours of recording capacity left. Seriously, this camera will pay for itself inside of two years through saved tape cost. Given this, I think the AVCHD format is more than capable for consumer and semi-pro use. It seems as though more and more apps are becoming compatible with it as well. There is something about the concept of compression (and throwing away data) that offends the pro in me. But AVCHD does a nice job. After all MP3 sounds good at 190kbps and above.
If you have an Intel Mac, Final Cut Pro 6 can read the files straight off the camera. It must convert to ProRes to edit. You CAN use the motion picture browser that comes with it for maintaining the original files.
This is windows only – I run mine through a virtual Vista instance (Parallels Windows for the MAC). This software allows for quick burn to DVD and the facial recognition feature. ONE-BUTTON DVD BURN
This is cool concept, but the conversion from AVCHD to DVD (which requires MPG2 format) is less than speedy. Easy, yes! Quick, no! A typical DVD might take 1 to 2 hours to convert and burn.
FACIAL RECOGNITION INDEXING
This feature was an unexpected surprise. When this is turned on, the camera identifies faces while shooting. It then provides a list of faces as indexes for each clip. While you are viewing it in browser mode, you can browse through faces, not just locations or dates. At first glance, this seemed to be somewhat silly. But it works well and is actually quite useful.
10 MEGA-PIXEL STILLS
Keep in mind, I love my Canon 40D. Seriously, I love SLRs, high dollar lenses, and controlling depth of field. I’m very excited about Canon’s new 5DmarkII – which shoots video in HD format. With that said, having a quality camera built into a camcorder, is extremely convenient and sound idea as well. I would suspect for the non-discriminating photographer, this camera is more than enough. And even for the more discriminating, the ability to grab a still while shooting (even if the quality isn’t pro) is very cool…and inviting.
LOW LIGHT
Two steps forward, one step backward! This might be Sony’s worst low-light performer in years. It doesn’t get a failing grade here, just a low one. Don’t expect to shoot stunning footage in a dimly lit room or outdoors at night. It does have the “night vision” mode – but I’m referring to color shooting.
CONCLUSION
I would highly recommend this camcorder for personal use to anyone, even pros. And given the smaller hard drive versions are fairly cheap…the savings realized from not having to purchase blank tapes allows anyone to shoot in High Def for little expense. Do it. Seriously, explain to your wife how much savings you’ll realize, and do it!