Sony DCR-HC27 Handycam Mini DV Camcorder


Sony DCR-HC27 Handycam Mini DV Camcorder
MINIDV CARL ZEISS 2.5 LCD INA 20X OPT. ZM 800X DIG. ZM NS

Customer Review: Sony DCR-HC27… Top Quality…
I am going away in October 07 for 3 Weeks to Thailand, I am sick of looking at “Still Image photos” so I decided to get a New Digital Video Camcorder, I have looked at various models “Samsung, Jvc, Hitachi, plus more” but the Sony DCR-HC27 sounded the best one plus the reviews on Amazon really helped me to choose the right product for me.

When the Package came it was a big box because I orderd other thing’s with it, a Spare Battery FH-50 it’s not as strong as the Battery which comes with the Camera (FH-70) but great to have as a Stand by Battery if the other runs out of Charge, it comes with a Charger to plug into the Camera to charge the Battery. I also orderd the Bag which you can buy together with this Item at the moment on Amazon’s page, the Bag is fantastic I can fit everything inside it.

The camera is really small and very comfortable in the hand. I’m sure this will take some great Video Shots of my Holiday to Thailand,

Thank you Amazon & Reviewers for helping me choose the right product

Fantastic Camcorder… Buy one, Plus AMAZON is the cheapest place for a Brand New one :)
Customer Review: YES THE BEST CAMERCORDER IS FINALLY MINE!
This is a fantastic Videocamera - I love it. Video your most presious moments with this lovely, light machine. Watch it on DVDs, after converting them. Top quality films and photos. This is really easy to use and I recommend this to anyone, whatever age.

It also takes photos - great.

This is really good for holidays, partys, sports day etc.

It also has special effects built in: Sepia, Negative Art, Mossic, Black and White etc!

I love it! Nothing short of five stars!

This is the best camera ever!!!!!

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Xacti Digital Movie CG65 Camcorder - green

JVC GR-D720 Mini DV Digital Camcorder
Compact easy-to-use DVC with amazing 28x Optical zoom and 16:9 Widescreen LCD
Amazon Price: ?129.00
Customer Review: A no-brainer for your career.
Camcorders are highly underrated. Nowadays people think you can use your phone or digital camera to do the job, but nothing much compares to recording on a tool made for the job. Over the years I’ve recommended that people use a camera like this one to practice making speeches and presentations - this one is just the job - inexpensive, easy to use, and records onto DVDs, so you can watch the playback on your TV. Making presentations and being good on your feet is just so important nowadays. Practise making your speech or presentation on your feet in front of this camera, then review the results. Nothing will give you better, honest feedback than a camcorder - at this price it’s a no-brainer for advancing your career.
Customer Review: Absolutely Fantasic - No Other Way To Describe It
I got this camcorder today although not from amazon i went and got it from currys digital where it was ?149.58 which is cheaper than amazon was at the time and i have to say just how superb it really is! I havent had a camcorder in the past so i cant really compare it to another one but it really is fantastic and i can assure you that you will not get as good value for money with any other camcorder than you get with this it really is superb. Hope this has helped!!

Power Battery for BenQ DC S40, LiIon, Li-Ion, Lithium Ion Technology, 100% fits, properly matching, Batteries, Camcorder, Video, Digital Camera
You will receive one Power Rechargeable Battery. This Rechargeable Battery 100% fits and is properly matching !

Li-Ion Rechargeable Battery (originally packaged factory-new merchandise)

This high capacity rechargeable battery definitely disposes of more power than the original rechargeable battery included in delivery of the unit. This rechargeable battery can be used instead of the original rechargeable battery without any problems and can be recharged with the available standard power supply. The rechargeable battery is protected and secured against overcharge and short-circuits.

Features of this rechargeable battery:

  • safety due to heat and overcharge protection
  • real lithium-ion rechargeable battery, more power than the original rechargeable battery
  • no memory effect recharge your battery whenever you like
  • excellent fitting accuracy, certified quality merchandise, not an original accessory
  • the standard battery charger can still be used


Aiptek T100LE Camcorder (MPEG 4 Recording (640*480 pixels), 3 MP CMOS sensor, 1.5″ LCD display, 4* digital zoom, SD card format)
Amazon Price: ?67.90

Sony DCR-HC37 Handycam Mini DV Camcorder With 2.5” LCD Screen


Sony DCR-HC37 Handycam Mini DV Camcorder With 2.5” LCD Screen
An extremely compact MiniDV Handycam with 2.5 LCD screen Carl Zeiss lens and a market leading 40x Optical Zoom. Number of Pixels Gross (K):800 Built in Microphone:Stereo LCD: Size (inch):2.5 Picbridge:No Focusing Distance: 1.9-76mm USB Streaming:Yes 16:9 Wide (Full):No Optical Zoom:40 Digital Zoom:2000 Focus: Full Range Auto:Yes SteadyShot:Super ElectronicFlash (Automatic Pop Up):No Memory Stick PRO Compatibility:No Supplied Accessories:AC adaptor Multi AV cable Rechargable battery pack picture motion browser Battery Life (Mins):110 mins Warranty:1 years warranty

Customer Review: Great value easy to use gadget
It has been many years since we bought our previous and only camcorder, a JVC S-VHS device which got little use, and today looks frankly embarassing! So when looking around for a replacement I had no idea which “flavour” to go for DV/DVD/HD etc but after reading a few forums, I ended up deciding to go for the tried and tested DV format - I have to say first impressions are great….easy to set up and connected with my mac and imovie first time, having read other reviews I made sure before buying, that I already had the right firewire cable, as you only get the AV variety in the box.

The colour and sharpness of the image is impressive for such a “low end” model and all in all, for ?150, I think it would be difficult to find a better camera!

Customer Review: V good stylish camera but wait a minute….
Well…

Good camera I would recommend it. but dont be fooled into thinking it comes with a USB cable or a way of connecting it to a PC cause it doesnt. You can connect it to the tv with the AV cable but pc connection is classed as accessory.

so after spending ?189 on the camera, taps, bag ive not gotta splash more out on a firewire cable and/or USB cable. nice one amazon thought you could have at least included it for free!

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Canon MVX35i MiniDV Digital Camcorder [2.2MP, 10x Optical]
From the moment it slips into your palm, the compact MVX35i will slip into your life. This super-stylish extension of your imagination does so much more than simply record. Beneath the lustrous metallic coat lies 2.2 Megapixel power in waiting: both super
Used Price: ?680.00

JVC GR-D93EK MiniDV Digital Camcorder [1.33Mp, 10x Optical]
Used Price: ?225.00
Customer Review: Good Camcorder, but Noisy Motor!
It wasn’t so bad if you were recording in LP but in SP it was terrible and it was even bad filming outside. Apart from that it was very good filming in low light and excellent in day light and plus it took really good stills, upto 1600×1200. If the filming wasn’t so noisy i would have kept it and gave it 5 stars but sadly because of that i give it 3.
Customer Review: Noisy motor
I have just bought this camera from Amazon having read the reviews on the site, which seem to give the impression that its known motor problem might now be a thing of the past. If my model is anything to go by it isn't. When videoing a quiet room, the noise level from the motor is astonishing and it all transfers to the tape. I was taping over a recording from a Sony camera and when the JVC recording finished and the Sony part resumed, the difference was incredible. I'm surprised that it is still possible to buy cameras with this problem when it has been known about for over a year. It's quite a shame as the spec is exactly what I wanted, but I wouldn't be able to live with such intrusive camera noise.

Power Battery for Casio Exilim EX-Z75, LiIon, Li-Ion, Lithium Ion Technology, 100% fits, properly matching, Batteries, Camcorder, Video, Digital Camera
You will receive one Power Rechargeable Battery. This Rechargeable Battery 100% fits and is properly matching !

Li-Ion Rechargeable Battery (originally packaged factory-new merchandise)

This high capacity rechargeable battery definitely disposes of more power than the original rechargeable battery included in delivery of the unit. This rechargeable battery can be used instead of the original rechargeable battery without any problems and can be recharged with the available standard power supply. The rechargeable battery is protected and secured against overcharge and short-circuits.

Features of this rechargeable battery:

  • safety due to heat and overcharge protection
  • real lithium-ion rechargeable battery, more power than the original rechargeable battery
  • no memory effect recharge your battery whenever you like
  • excellent fitting accuracy, certified quality merchandise, not an original accessory
  • the standard battery charger can still be used


DSCT1 Digital Camera

Jessops is the specialist photographic retailer that sells a broad range of products and offers a range of online services. The 16,000 products include digital and traditional cameras, camcorders, printers, scanners, binoculars, accessories and consumables. Jessops offer a price promise, which ensures that you won’t find any Jessop photographic products cheaper anywhere else on the High Street. So if you are looking for value for money photography products that you can buy in confidence buy from Jessops!

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Brand new digital camera cable for use with Nikon cameras.
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Disney High School Musical Pix Micro Digital Camera

Choosing The Right Digital Camera

Let’s get something straight right out of the box. If you’re looking to buy a new digital camera, you don’t really have to be an expert in pixels and mega pixels and all that kind of stuff. If you expect to find that kind of deep technical discussion here, you’re in the wrong place.

Actually, there’s a whole lot of stuff you don’t really need to know before tackling the daunting task of choosing the right digital camera for you.

First of all, forget all the high-tech jargon. It’s mostly a lot of sales hype anyway. Choosing a good unit is pretty simple really…pretty much all you have to remember is that the higher the mega pixel rating on the front of the camera, the bigger picture you can make without it breaking up into little chunks (called pixels) and most likely the more cash it’s likely going to pry out of your pocket. Each model has an array of techno-widgets that go by different names but they all have the same basic focus, to help you take a better picture.

I have a quick (and admittedly simplistic) overview of the pixel story. The shot on the left on my web page

http://www.great-nature-photography.com/digital-cameras.html

is one I took with a high pixel rating and the one on the right was with a much lower rating. They’ve been enlarged way beyond what you would normally do, but I do have a point to make here. If you look carefully you can see there’s a terrific difference in the way they look or, in the ‘resolution’. The image on the right has already broken up into small pieces (pixels) (I hope) you can readily see. The picture on the left was magnified several times more than the one on the right which should give you an idea of how big you can enlarge it and still retain a fairly decent result. By the way, these shots are of a very, very small piece of a picture I took of snapdragons in our front yard.

A camera with a 5.0 mega pixel rating or higher can produce a decent 16X20 print but one with a 2.0 mega pixel rating or lower should be restricted to a maximum of 4X6 prints. For the most part, you won’t be happy with pictures any larger than 4X6 from the lower rated camera.

Okay, Let’s Pick A Camera…

Well, I have my favorites and my not-so favorites.

When I looked at all the digital cameras available, I was more than a little astounded at the vast selection of available equipment. It seems that every company that’s ever heard the word “computer” has jumped on the bandwagon. It seems they lay their hands on some lenses, wrap a computerized box around them, added a few techno-widgets and bingo, instant digital camera! What can you say…it’s money in the bank!

Where did I start looking? Well, I went back to my tried and true method of buying a film camera that I talk about later. It’s always worked for me and didn’t let me down this time either.

My personal digital camera finally wound up to be an Olympus C-5050. By the way, in my opinion Olympus didn’t do themselves or their customers any favors by dumping the f1.8 lens on the C-5060.

I chose this camera for the fast f1.8 lens and ease of use. I’m lazy at best and wanted a unit that’s going to do most of the work for me while leaving me with the option of doing what I want to do when I want to do it.

This unit has all the automatic features I’ll ever need but I also have the ability to set up the camera completely manually. I can still do minimum depth-of-field work among other things. I never want to completely lose control to a mindless computer although they do have their uses at times.

The first thing I did after I opened the box was print off the user manual - all 265 pages of it! I figured I had done my duty by it and promptly ignored it.

After very quickly killing my first two sets of “high-capacity” alkaline batteries, I sprung for a couple sets of Nickel-Metal Hydride (Ni-MH) rechargeables. Not only did they last longer but it was a heck of a lot cheaper than replacing the alkalines every darn time I picked up the camera.

It boils me to have to admit this but I actually had to go back to the user manual. I wasn’t getting the results I wanted and there was also some ’stuff’ on the camera I had no clue about using. The moral of this story is that you’re gonna have to at least have a nodding acquaintance with your user manual. Sorry, but that’s just the way it is.

Back to choosing a camera…

Throughout the years I’ve learned that if a camera ‘fit’ my hand it worked well for me. It may sound a little strange at first but just think about it. If you’re handling something that feels awkward, your results are going to look like it. I had a Mamiya RB-67 for a lot of years. It was a big, ungainly unit but it was a good ‘fit’ for me and produced a great image. I also used a Hasselblad for quite a while but I much preferred the Mamiya and it gave me better results than the Hasselblad. (Don’t tell Hasselblad lovers I said this, they’ll kill me!)

So, rule of thumb…if it fits your hand nicely, if the main controls are handy to your fingers, if it has the mega pixel number you want and falls within your budget, you can be pretty confident this will do the job you want it to do. Oh yes, if it’s a brand you’ve never heard of before, be very, very wary. It may work well and it may not. If it doesn’t, there may not be any tech backup for you to be able to access.

The major camera companies spend lots of money developing new photo technologies. Although the latest techno-widgets go by different names, they all have the same goal, to make your pictures look as good as possible.

Pretty well every company in the world that has even come close to producing a good digital camera has gotten into the “SLR Wars”.

Single lens reflex cameras dominated the photo market for years until digital technology hit the market. Because of design and price limitations, SLR technology has not been widely available in the non-professional digital cameras until the last year or so.

The furious pace of technological developments has completely overtaken the market and even professional photographers are being boggled trying to keep up.

Remember the old Nikon F2? It was the major link in the Nikon chain of professional cameras for over 10 years! This was pretty much the norm until the computer hit the photographic industry big time.

Changes used to come slowly and deliberately and it wasn’t hard to keep up with the latest and greatest when major new developments came along only two or three times in a decade. The battle now is to produce digital cameras that operate faster, can be sold cheaper and will produce a better picture. Severe competition even exists within the same corporate structure where teams of developers do their utmost to ‘outgun’ other camera designers who work in the same building as they do!

Nikon has a distinct advantage over many of the other manufacturers in that owners of some of the older series of Nikon lenses can use them with the new digital bodies, a tremendous dollar saving to the photographer.

Most of this rapid development is focused on the professional photographer. But, with technology changing as rapidly as it is, a camera technology that sells for several thousands of dollars today will undoubtedly become available to people like you and me in the next couple of years for a whole lot less money.

One of the hardest jobs a new camera buyer will have is determine which of the new techno-widgets does the best job and is the best value.

One thing to keep in mind about camera features?they all have the same job and that’s to help you take a better photo.

Picture this if you will. If you lined up 10 cameras from different manufacturers, each with similar basic features, took the same picture with each, I think even the camera manufacturers would have a tough time picking out which of the resulting photos came from their units.

Getting feedback from all kinds of users is one very excellent use of newsgroups. Serious photographers, amateur and professional both, love to talk about their latest ‘toys’. This is a good way to spend time and a good place to ask questions and (sometimes) get intelligent answers.

Don’t wait until you’ve made the investment to start doing your homework.

Another rule of thumb, if you’re happy with a particular brand name already, my suggestion is to stick with it. You’ll probably be more satisfied in the long run.

Now, having said all that, there are currently five search engine ‘favorite’ companies among the people looking for information on the Internet, Sony, Canon, Olympus, Kodak and Nikon in this order of popularity. Of this group, Sony is the only one with no prior experience in camera building before digital.

Understanding how to set your camera’s resolution is absolutely vital. There’s no shortcut and there’s no way around it. This is the core of taking a good, reproducible photograph. If, for instance, your camera is set for 240X360, you can forget making any kind of decent print above a ‘thumbnail’ size.

The low-end cameras are not a bargain if you’re looking for good photo reproduction. Labs are constantly arguing with customers who submit low resolution digital images from a cheap camera for printing and then aren’t happy with the results. They simply don’t understand why the pictures from their brand new digital camera are so lousy. Lenses and the type of digital image recording technology are also critical factors.

I won’t get into the technical details of why but I will suggest you consider spending in the $250 to $400 range if you want something that will satisfy you.

Let’s spend a few minutes on lenses. Pretty well all of the digital cameras these days have a form of zoom lens. Most of the higher-end cameras have the capability for the user to add either an external telephoto or wide-angle lens. Depending on the type of photography you want to do will determine whether or not this is of value to you.

One thing to watch out for. The higher end cameras have very good glass lenses. It’s part of what you’re paying for. The lower-end units have progressively less expensive lenses and consequently, a lower image definition.

There are both optical and digital zoom capabilities on digital cameras. The term “optical zoom” simply means you’re using the glass lenses to do the magnification. “Digital zoom” on the other hand simply increases the size of the pixels to make the image larger. For reasons of image clarity, the optical zoom is a far better way to go.

One last note - if you run across the “best deal in town” on a very low-priced name brand camera, check to make sure it isn’t badly out-dated. Buying well-priced clearance stock is okay if it isn’t too old. In this computer age, pretty well anything over a year old is considered ‘old technology’. As new technologies are developed the price keeps going down so you could actually be money ahead by investing in the ‘latest and greatest’.

Always keep in mind the old adage that ‘you usually get what you pay for.

If you go to a ‘box’ store looking for the best price, don’t expect service. The folks there simply don’t know what they’re selling. Their job is to move as much merchandise as they can as quickly as possible. It’s not to give you advice.

Go to the Internet to get the latest data directly from the manufacturers. It changes very, very quickly. When you do this, try to climb through all the sales hype to get to the ‘meat’ of what the cameras are all about. Newsgroups can also a very excellent source of advice for ‘newbies’.

Most people will be very happy to give you their personal opinion of what you should buy. Just remember, they won’t usually tell you what the downside to their purchase is. They don’t want to look less than ‘expert’ in your eyes. Do your own homework. This is an investment you probably won’t repeat for several years.

A specialty camera store on the other hand gives the buyer both service and product and usually very well. Keep in mind that the specialty store personnel are quite often very highly trained and will probably be well prepared to help you find the best equipment for you and will also give you a ‘leg-up’ in getting started using it.

We need to spend a couple of moments on storage media. Whatever size media card you stick in your camera will determine the number of pictures you can take and store. It’s like a roll of film, the bigger the roll the more pictures you can take. Digital images are no different. The greater the number of available megabytes (Mb), the higher the number of pictures you can take.

A word of caution - never, never, never leave your media card in a photo lab. The incidence of loss is high and most labs won’t replace lost cards. Quite frankly, I don’t blame them. Far, far too many false claims have been made and labs now refuse to take any responsibility for your memory cards.

That’s it for now. Keep your film dry your lenses clean!
Gordon
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High School Musical digital camera. Holds 40 photos, fixed focus, status LCD. 1 AAA Battery required (not supplied)
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Amazon Price: ?79.99
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Amazon Price: ?7.77
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