Thanks DVCAM etc would be nice but the size factor is a killer for me. FYI I thought that HDV used the same 25mps MiniDV data rate (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDV#Specifications) with the trade off for the higher resolution being the use of MPEG-2.
Yeah, it is. I don't know where I came up with that 12mbps figure. MiniDV is certainly the same as DVCPRO25 (25mbps), and HDV is too, of course, since it uses the same physical tape format. I was temporarily insane or something.
What do you mean about the "size factor" for DVCAM? If you're referring to the old DVCAM tape-based cameras, then I understand. The full-sized cameras stink for most people. The new (little) P2 camera isn't like that at all though. My HVX200 is smaller than the Canon AND the Sony HDV cameras (only slightly, but it is). And if you also get a FireStore you get 100GB of storage space (which at DVCAM HD data rates is about 100 minutes record time), you don't have to ingest the footage to get it onto the computer (just plug in the FireWire drive), and you don't have to buy any P2 cards and break the bank. I was certainly with you on my gut instinct to go with a HDV camera at first... The P2 flash media is certainly way too expensive right now. Throw in a FireStore though, and you've got a pretty great rig with plenty of flexibility and much higher quality than you'll get with ANY HDV camera. And, you can't beat not having to spend all that time ingesting the tapes! One tiny little thing to consider if you're in the US... Panasonic US is running
a rebate deal right now that if you buy a HVX200 you get
one of these for free which is pretty cool. If only the MiniDV tape function on the HVX200 was able to record in HDV format (it can use MiniDV tapes, but it's DVCPRO25 -- regular DV basically -- only. Then it'd really be the PERFECT camera.
That said... I'll reiterate. I don't think you'll be disappointed with the Canon. I'm still probably going to end up buying one or two to replace some of our installed cameras next year -- If I don't decide to go with one of the Panasonic AVCHD cameras of course...
I admit, the benefits of being able to carry around a whole suitcasefull of tapes and never having to worry about running out of recording space is huge. For me though... I rarely need to shoot more than an hour of HD footage in one go. Even if I did... Where would I store it all when I do get back to do the ingesting?!? I mean... I have a 2TB RAID5 for just Video Editing, but it only goes so far!! (And remember, if you're adding any text or motion graphics, or doing any compositing of multiple layers of video, you can't keep your timelines in HDV format or it'll recompress the video over and over. HDV has SERIOUS generational loss issues due to the temporal compression and rounding issues with the color space.)
As far as AVCHD.... I'm reserving judgement on that format. The current implementation of it isn't up to snuff at all. AVC codecs are very difficult to do with current processors in real time, even when hardware accelerated, without compromising somewhat on quality. Does this mean it'll never take off? Certainly not... However, I do think the "existing infrastructure" argument is, from a manufacturing and business perspective, a bigger concern than you may be considering.
HDV uses MiniDV tapes. AVCHD doesn't -- it's designed for flash or hard drive storage. Flash and HD storage are nice for pro and semi-pro use, because of the ease of ingesting issues, but the benefits of sticking to the existing MiniDV infrastructure are immense to the manufacturers. It is cheaper because they already have working MiniDV "mechanisms" designed and de-bugged. They just need to migrate the equipment into the new cameras and change the encoder chips. There is already an entrenched manufacturing base for the media. The media is cheap. Compare record time costs on Flash vs. Tape right now.
That said... If Panasonic plays their cards right, and fixes some of the quality issues I saw at NAB, I can certainly see AVCHD coming out on top eventually.
One very interesting possibility for their new AVCHD cameras is that they are a very cheap way to get a 3CCD HD Camera with a HDMI port on them. You can then get one or two of these cheap
Blackmagic Design Intensity cards and record in full 4:2:2 uncompressed HD glory right onto a computer ... That has some serious possibilities!
As far as MC supporting the native HDV formats... I actually am putting together a test to throw at MC. I'm a Final Cut user though, so my exports from the HDV 720p30 and 1080i60 sequences are going to be in a MOV container file format. That's what FCP ingests with from HDV cameras natively, and that's how you can export it without recompressing or anything. There might be a way to export to MPEG-2 and keep the native long-GOP HDV structure and not recompress, but I'm not sure how! Do you know what container format your ingested files will be? What NLE are you using?