best 60 fps camcorder image
Nishantha
I'm looking for anything that can record around 200 fps (or more) in HD . The quality doesn't have to be huge, as long as its not blurry or bad. If it also has an option for ever faster FPS in low quality thats great but not necessary. All I really need is a camera that can do slow motion in good quality.
Answer
sony "handycam" dcr-sr585
has night vision
good framerate
hd quality and hd streaming
win 2000/xp/vista compatible
60 gigs
has,picture camera option
good zoom sorta....25x
carl zeiss lens...ok i guess
touch screen user interface
comes with remote for distance one man recording(or whatever you would call it,im sleepy)
slow motion would be more of an editing software business,not important as a cam feature
i got it when it was slightly new, 300 dollars....its been a year since
sony "handycam" dcr-sr585
has night vision
good framerate
hd quality and hd streaming
win 2000/xp/vista compatible
60 gigs
has,picture camera option
good zoom sorta....25x
carl zeiss lens...ok i guess
touch screen user interface
comes with remote for distance one man recording(or whatever you would call it,im sleepy)
slow motion would be more of an editing software business,not important as a cam feature
i got it when it was slightly new, 300 dollars....its been a year since
What is the difference between NTSC and PAL formats for a digital hard drive camcorder?
drag0n
I am trying to buy a hard drive camcorder online, but the description says the camcorder is NTSC format. I thought digital camcorders were all formats, cant they be switched? Whats the difference? Does that mean I cant use it in a PAL country?
Thanks
Answer
NTSC is based on the 60 hertz AC frequency we use here.
PAL is based on the 50 hertz AC frequency used in Europe and elsewhere.
For a video recorder there is not much difference as far as the camera is concerned. What makes a difference is if you want to burn the video on to DVD and/or play back on different systems. There is a NTSC standard for 24.97 FPS for DVD usage. This is for Zone 0 compability. This is fine for computer playback, but can be a problem with some tabletop DVD players that are locked to a single zone.
In your computer you can change the format from NTSC to PAL with a video editor. It is not any automatic thing, you have to setup everything correctly.
NTSC is based on the 60 hertz AC frequency we use here.
PAL is based on the 50 hertz AC frequency used in Europe and elsewhere.
For a video recorder there is not much difference as far as the camera is concerned. What makes a difference is if you want to burn the video on to DVD and/or play back on different systems. There is a NTSC standard for 24.97 FPS for DVD usage. This is for Zone 0 compability. This is fine for computer playback, but can be a problem with some tabletop DVD players that are locked to a single zone.
In your computer you can change the format from NTSC to PAL with a video editor. It is not any automatic thing, you have to setup everything correctly.
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