HDC Series System Cameras Sony HDC-700 Series Introduced in 1998 for HDTV video broadcast era. HDC-700A/750A were
Sony HDVS compatible and equipped with 2 million pixel frame-interline-transfer (FIT)
CCD imager that could capture 1080 of active lines per frame. For sensitivity, it achieved
F8.0 at 2000 lux. HDC-700A Series inherits many of the main features of the field proven
SDTV Sony BVP-700/500 Series cameras. • Sony HDC-700A – HD studio/
OB camera • Sony HDC-750A – HD portable companion camera • Sony HDC700A/L • Sony HDCU-700A
Sony HDC-900 Series Introduced in 2000. • HDC-900/910
Sony HDC-1000 Series Point of view cameras •
Sony DXC-H10 is a small HDVS (high definition video system) point of view HD camera introduced in 1998 capable of recording 1000 TV lines of resolution and weighs 1.2 kg.
Sony HDR-HC1 The
Sony HDR-HC1, introduced in mid-2005 (
MSRP $1999 US), was the first
HDV CMOS camcorder to support
1080i. The CMOS sensor has a resolution of 1920×1440 for digital still pictures and captures video at 1440×1080
interlaced. The camera supports
digital image stabilization. The camcorder can convert captured HDV data to
DV data for editing using
non-linear editing systems which do not support HDV or for creating edits which are viewable on non-
HDTV television sets. The HVR-A1 is the prosumer version of the HDR-HC1, having additional manual controls and XLR ports.
Sony HDR-HC5 The
Sony HDR-HC5, introduced in May 2007 (
MSRP $1099 US), was the third DV tape HDV CMOS camcorder to support 1080i. The CMOS sensor has a resolution of 2MP and interlaced 4MP for digital still pictures and captures video at 1440×1080 interlaced. Digital photos can be stored on a Sony
Memory Stick. It requires a minimum of 2Lux.
Sony HDR-HC7 The
Sony HDR-HC7, introduced in 2008 (
MSRP $1399 US), was another DV tape HDV CMOS camcorder to support 1080i. The 1/2.9 CMOS sensor has a resolution of 3MP and interlaced 6.1MP for digital still pictures and captures video at 1440×1080 interlaced. The camera includes a manual focus wheel, mic and headphone jacks, and a slightly larger imaging sensor, producing 3200K gross pixels versus the HC5' 2100K. The HC7 also sports Sony's Super SteadyShot optical image stabilization system. In December 2007, Sony released the HD1000, the shoulder mount version of the HC7. Its advantage include much more stable off-tripod footage; full-size zoom control; custom ring to manually control focusing, exposure (iris and gain), zoom, or
shutter speed; support for a large video light on its front cold shoe; and wireless audio.
Sony HDR-FX1 The
Sony HDR-FX1, introduced in late 2004, was the first HDV 3CCD camcorder to support 1080i (1440 × 1080 resolution with
4:2:0 color sampling). The Sony HVR-Z1U and HVR-Z1E are the "professional" versions of this camera with additional features such as balanced XLR audio inputs, DVCAM recording, and extended DSP capabilities (i.e. cine/gamma controls). The HDR-FX1 includes three 16:9 1.12 Megapixel gross CCDs. Each CCD measures 1012 × 1111 pixels total, 972 × 1100 effective. It includes a 12× optical zoom Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* lens, a 3.5-inch LCD screen, a zoom ring, focus ring, and an iris / aperture adjustment knob.
Cineframe The FX1 offers Cineframe shooting modes at 30 and 24 frames per second. The camera uses an interlaced image but extracts progressive images from individual fields by doubling them. The 30fps and 24fps do not offer the same resolution as true progressive scanning. The 24fps Cineframe shooting mode does not offer the same resolution, or motion cadence as true 24fps progressive scanning.
Known flaw When the audio mode of HDR-FX1/HDR-FX1E camcorder is switched to the 16-bit setting (in DV mode) and the unit is then turned off, the unit resets to the default 12-bit setting, though the LCD indicator of the unit continues to display the 16-bit audio setting.
Sony HDR-FX7 The
Sony HDR-FX7, was introduced in September 2006. The new camcorder was the first camcorder below $3,000 to offer full 1080 HD resolution with a three-chip sensor. • Resolution: Sony claims "full" 1080 HD • Sensor: changed to 3 × 1/4" ClearVid CMOS • Light sensitivity: worse by 33% (4lux) • Zoom: increased to 20× optical zoom (30× digital) • Lens/filter: decreased to 62mm/bayonet mount • Optical Image Stabilizer (OIS, SteadyShot 4 settings) • Video out: included HDMI • Weight: reduced to 1.6 kg (3.52 lb.) The company claims that HDR-FX7 has much improved resolution (full 1080i HD) under good lighting. In low-light situations, Sony FX1 will still produce better results.
Sony HDR-SR1/HDR-SR5/HDR-SR7 The
Sony HDR-SR1, introduced in late 2006, was Sony's first
high definition hard disk drive based camcorder. It launched with a 30 gigabyte internal drive and – along with the Sony HDR-UX1 – is the first camcorder that records high definition video in
AVCHD format. In June 2007, Sony released two new AVCHD format HD Hard Disk camcorders, a 40 GB (HDR-SR5) and 60 GB model (HDR-SR7). All three have the ability to record
Dolby Digital 5.1. == Newer high definition models ==