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Introduced in 1985, this was the first one-piece camcorder using full-size VHS cassettes. The camera uses a 1/2-inch colour Newvicon tube with a consumer-grade lens barrel giving a 6 times zoom with macro, normal focussing down to 4 feet (1.2 metres), and a minimum illumination of 10 lux. The microphone and folding viewfinder are physically ...
The Flip Video was a series of tapeless camcorders introduced by Pure Digital Technologies in 2006. Slightly larger than a smartphone, the Flip Video was a basic camcorder with record, zoom, playback and browse buttons and a USB jack for uploading video. The original models recorded at a 640x480-pixel resolution; later models featured HD ...
It can record 3D Full HD video in 1080p at a maximum data rate of 34 Mbit/s with stereo audio (also for stills) and has 5x optical zoom in 3D or 10x optical zoom in 2D. The 3D image is viewable on its 3.5" LCD touchscreen panel without glasses. [14] [15] List: DXG DXG-5F9VK HD 1080p 3D Camcorder; Sony HDR-TD10 3D Handycam (2011)
It launched with a 30 gigabyte internal drive and – along with the Sony HDR-UX1 – is the first camcorder that records high definition video in AVCHD format. In June 2007, Sony released two new AVCHD format HD Hard Disk camcorders, a 40 GB (HDR-SR5) and 60 GB model (HDR-SR7). All three have the ability to record Dolby Digital 5.1.
The camcorders record high definition AVCHD video onto an SD card. It has no viewfinder and no focus ring. It has no viewfinder and no focus ring. Video can be recorded in four quality settings: FXP (1920 × 1080, 17 Mbit/s), XP+ (1440 × 1080, 12 Mbit/s), SP (1440 × 1080, 7 Mbit/s), and LP (1440 × 1080, 5 Mbit/s).
HDV 720p format allows recording high definition video (HDV-HD) as well as progressive-scan standard definition video (HDV-SD). [7] HDV-HD closely matches broadcast 720p progressive scan video standard in terms of scanning type, frame size, aspect ratio and data rate. Earlier HDV 720p camcorders could shoot only at 24, 25 and 30 frames per second.
Copying files from an AVCHD camcorder or from removable media can be performed faster than from a tape-based camcorder, because the transfer speed is not limited by realtime playback. Just as editing DVCPRO HD and HDV video once demanded an expensive high-end computer, AVCHD editing software requires powerful machines. Compared to HDV, AVCHD ...
The Flip Video Mino was a smaller version of the Flip Video camcorder. The original Mino captured video in 640x480 resolution at 30 frames per second with later models featuring HD recording. The Mino had many features that the Flip Video did not have, including an internal rechargeable battery (instead of 2 AA batteries ) and touch-sensitive ...