Sabtu, 09 November 2013

Whats the best camcorder for me to buy?

Q. I need it to be under 400 dollars, have good picture quality, microphones need to be able to work with it and compatibility with imovie on my mac.

A. If you can't stand Mini DV tape, the JVC MG255 gives *decent* video quality with the HDD convenience, and it should work with little trouble in iMovie HD from the iLife 2006 suite. If you have iMovie 08, I can't comment on that. I have a JVC MG555 and it works fine with iMovie HD (06), but I have to delete the first frame of each clip, as there is some overlay ghosting effect (deleting the first frame for about 20 clips takes less than a minute for me).

If you can handle Mini DV tapes, then you have lots of better options. Check out the Canon ZR line for cheap cams with mic input (some of them have it), but I warn you, I bought one and absolutely hated the horrible tape motor noise that I couldn't get rid of (the one I bought had no mic input; I was stupid back then).

Honestly, you aren't going to get "great" video quality for under $400, but because I'm not sure what you mean by "good" I can't guarantee what you'll like. The kind of camcorder that has a mic input is the kind that starts to merge itself into the higher price range.

I recommend you to look at the Canon Elura 100, which won an award on the below-listed site, and has a mic-in. It's cheap too, at under $400.

Check out www.camcorderinfo.com to see if anything they reviewed suits your tastes.


What is the best camera for shooting video? *READ DESCRIPTION*?
Q. I am looking for a camera to film YouTube movie reviews and short films. I want it to shoot in 1080p and have good sound capabilities. Also I would like it to be affordable preferably under 400 dollars. Something durable that won't break if it is dropped. I am currently looking at some Nikon Coolpix Cameras are they any good? PLEASE HELP

A. The Nikon Coolpix cameras were designed to capture still images. They do that well. Capturing video is a "convenience feature". The video is ok - but audio is not implemented well. No manual audio control; no mic jack.

Something durable? There are not many "ruggedized" cameras or camcorders out there - the closest may be helmet cams.

I think you need to make a choice - either good video and audio or durability - there's nothing that does both. For a camcorder, something in the Canon HF M series. For a helmet cam, either the GoPro or Contour HD. If you go the helmet cam route, then use an external audio capture device like a Zoom H2... When you edit the video, import the audio, synch and mute the audio that was captured by the helmet cam...





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