Canon's HV20 HDV camcorder reviewed: dubbed "the monster"
If camcorder sales are to recover, it'll be the ability to record in HD that sparks the resurrection. After all, just about any new digicam and some cellphones can do a passing job at recording VGA or better quality video thus making the purchase of a second dedicated device hard to justify for the average consumer. That's what makes Canon's new iVIS HV20 so interesting; it shoots 1920 x 1080 resolution natively in HDV format to miniDV tapes and includes a 24p cinema mode to boot, a first in this class of camcorders. Best of all, it does this for about $1,000 -- not bad considering the price of other pro-sumer HD cams. Japan's Impress Watch are first to get their hands on a unit for review and although we had to read it using machine translation, it's easy to see that they are, er, impressed. Issues with low light shooting that plagued the HV10 seem to have been resolved on the HV20. While the CMOS sensor remains the same size, they've added the noise reduction technology found in their EOS camera lineup to bring low-light sensitivity down from 5lux to 3lux. In fact, the HV20 "eradicates" the HV10's weaknesses "entirely." Impress will be hitting a review of Sony's comparable HDR-HC7 -- a similarly spec'd HDV camcorder that also supports the xvYCC standard found in HDMI 1.3 for wider color range and space -- to see how they stack up side-by-side. No worries, you can wait, the HV20 won't hit US stores until April. Be sure to click the "read" link below for plenty of sample pics and video.






















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
register @ Feb 7th 2007 10:54AM
Nice! At that price point for a good HD camcorder, this could be the one that I buy.
MHAithaca @ Feb 7th 2007 11:16AM
I'd be tempted, too. I seem to remember seeing the info for the HV10 a while back, but can't find it for this... how much HD can you fit on a MiniDV tape? I was only able to find that if you're recording in SD, it's one-to-one... 80 minutes of SD on an 80-minute MiniDV tape.
When will we start seeing consumer or prosumer camcorders with 2.5" (laptop-style) or 1.5" (iPod-style) hard drives? An 80 GB hard drive is a good start, and a 160-200 GB drive would be fine for most uses. I don't necessarily need to be able to swap tapes all day; I generally just need to record an hour or two at a time, then could dump to another device for editing and storage. Make it a removable hard drive, and that even takes care of the swapping advantages of tape.
riverside_guy @ Feb 7th 2007 1:03PM
What might get my plastic vibrating is a 3 chip version of this camera. Tape is fine, it keeps the cost down and is actually more flexible in that one doesn't have to pay for an lug around stuff to dump the video data off to.
hmurchison @ Feb 8th 2007 2:49PM
This is the cam to get at this price point. I'm frankly unimpressed with the AVCHD cameras from Panny and Sony. Since HDV cameras record at the same 25Mbps rate that miniDV did you have the same recording time.
Jason Cohen @ Feb 15th 2007 4:49AM
I spotted this on digitalcamcordernews but I cannot find any info on this camera - anyone got a link that might shed some light ?
http://img262.imageshack.us/img262/4051/hv50naf3.jpg
Cheers
JC
Benn Salis @ Mar 28th 2007 9:25PM
Lot of evaluation footage has appeared at http://www.listvideo.com. Also check camcorderinfo.com for indepth review.
Seems better than Sony HC-7
max long @ Oct 8th 2007 3:29PM
look the HV20 in action on this videoblog http://extremehd.net