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- Newsgroups: rec.video
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!wupost!darwin.sura.net!ra!mpm!mullen
- From: mullen@itd.nrl.navy.mil (Preston Mullen)
- Subject: Re: TR200 == TR81?
- Message-ID: <Bxu80G.1FG@ra.nrl.navy.mil>
- Sender: usenet@ra.nrl.navy.mil
- Reply-To: mullen@itd.nrl.navy.mil
- Organization: Information Technology Division, Naval Research Laboratory
- References: <BxtwAu.A4B@taligent.com>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 01:55:27 GMT
- Lines: 61
-
- In article A4B@taligent.com, Jay_Tobias@taligent.com (Jay Tobias) writes:
- > Sounds good, but the stabilizer is the most totally cool feature to come along
- > short of the camcorder itself.
- > ...
- > How do others feel about stabilization? I've heard people say you can get used
- > to the "shakes" or learn how to overcome them, but shakey footage is just not
- > that viewable, right?
-
- Right, although it might add a certain sense of presence to shots of
- natural disasters, amusement park rides, combat, etc. Jittery images
- seem to contribute to tension. Watch a tape in which stabilization was
- switched on partway through a scene, and see if you do not feel calmer
- when the jitters smooth out.
-
- If you're always going to use a tripod or Steadicam Jr., or even just
- brace yourself properly, then you probably don't need stabilization in
- the camcorder.
-
- On the other hand, if you are going to try to hand-hold the camera and
- keep up with moving kids (especially infants on the floor), or shoot
- from waist level, or if you just can't hold it steady, then it makes a
- tremendous difference. Try it where you can watch the playback on a
- monitor, since, as others have pointed out, you can't always appreciate
- the effect through the viewfinder, especially while you are recording.
-
- For family shots, tourism, etc., stabilization also makes it easier to
- hand the camera to someone else, who might not be familiar with proper
- technique for holding the camera steady, and get presentable video.
- Tourists please note: despite this technical advantage, don't hand
- your camcorder to just anyone! Maybe that warning applies to parents
- too....
-
- The TR101's optical stabilization works very well. I've also briefly
- tried a Panasonic VHS-C model with digital stabilization; when you
- switch the feature on, it does a little jump zoom and the resolution
- suffers slightly, because it is then getting the picture from a
- slightly smaller area of the CCD. The optical stabilizer in the TR101
- doesn't do this. What remains to be seen is how the mechanical parts
- in the TR101 hold up over the long term. The optical stabilizer also
- uses up the battery somewhat faster; presumably digital stabilization
- would not drain the battery as much.
-
- The other difference is that the TR101's shake sensors detect actual
- camera motion, whereas most (but not all) digital stabilizers detect
- motion by scene analysis; this would seem to be independent of how the
- image is stabilized after motion is sensed, although there are obvious
- economies in combining scene-referenced sensing with digital
- stabilization. Also, a processor that does digital stabilization
- can also perform various effects like mirror and reverse imaging, which
- is what the Panasonic models do, and anamorphic 16:9 recording, which
- is what a new Hitachi model pictured in the Nov. 92 Video magazine does.
-
- What I find interesting, though probably not surprising, is that
- Sony/Canon (who jointly developed the TR101's stabilizer) found it
- better/cheaper to build a mechanical device than to simply add pixels
- to the CCD and do the stabilization digitally without losing camera
- resolution.
-
- Preston Mullen
- Naval Research Laboratory
-
-