I got one. I figured with $250 off, it was so cheap now that I may as well give it a shot. Here are some first impressions.
I was told by friends that it's pretty small. I guess size is a matter of perspective. I think a 30D is a puny camera while others complain that it's too big. The XH A1 may be small compared to the XL H1, but it's a darn sight bigger than any camcorder I've used.
They probably made it the size that it is so that they could fit all the buttons on it. It looks like it contracted some type of button sprouting chicken pox. I'd swear that there are at least three zoom controls on the darn thing.
I read through the manual and I still have no clue how to use this thing. It took me a couple of minutes just to figure out how to turn the thing on. I've obviously got a lot to learn.
I've been told that I should keep it in TV or M mode. I've got to watch for zebras. I've got keep it in manual focus but use the focus button when I want it to focus. I swear that I didn't have to learn as much to fly an ultra-light as I did just to start shooting with this thing.
The lens is a nice lens. It has that little red stripe that looks so nice on the black background. The only problem with the lens is that it has three rings on it (zoom, focus, and aperture). I'm told that's great because it gives me lots of control but so far it just gives me lots of confusion.
I downloaded about a dozen "presets" that are supposed to give it different looks. I have no idea when to use which ones. I'm also trying to sort through the frame rate options. Why would I want 24F if I could shoot 30F instead? And when should I shoot in "i" vs "F"?
I finally took some footage and dumped it onto my computer. I wanted to convert it to something that I could watch up in the theater. The camera shoots at 1080 and the projector displays at 720. I guess I'll deal with that when I render.
I'd really like to just look at the output, so I decided to just render everything that I shot. Not messing around with sound, editing, or any of the other things that essential to making a video somebody else might want to watch.
I decided to render it in QuickTime. I adjusted some settings and let her rip. My 5 minute blockbuster took 3 hours to render and resulted in a 28 gigabyte file that nothing would play.
I tried again using WMV. This time I got something useable, but it still took 3 hours. These turnaround times are going to make it really hard to learn what I'm doing. I know that I want to play around with sharpening, boosting the saturation, and boosting the contrast, but I'm not in the mood to wait another 3 hours to see how it looks.
I opened the additional books that I got on videography. Neither is very good. I've noticed that most pro photographers tend to be introverted. Most videographer/directors tend to be megalomaniacs. It comes through in the books.
They apparently coat camcorders with the same magic substance they use on cameras. It's that substance that infects you with the "I need just a few more things" disease. I ordered a new tripod head (Gitzo 2380). I've got the geeks at the office spec'ing out a new PC for video editing. My video friends are now telling me that decent sound is going to be a minimum of a four figure expenditure. Then there are lights, steadycams, 35mm adapters, and kinds of other goodies wanting to be bought.
So far, I'm bewildered by the camcorder. My arm is sore from carrying it around. I'm totally confused by the technology. I'm having a hard time adjusting to thinking in terms of video rather than still photos. I feel totally incompetent. On the other hand, as soon as I fill out that rebate (and wait a few months), I'll be $250 richer. Sweet.