JVC adopts AVCHD, CMOS for new HD Everios
By Shaz on Jun 23, 2008 in Cameras
In an interesting turn, JVC’s newest hard-disk-based HD camcorders–the Everio GZ-HD40, GZ-HD30, and GZ-HD10–will support AVCHD in addition to its traditional MPEG-2 formats. This is a great idea, at least for the interim, since it theoretically provides you with more flexibility in your video-editing options–especially if its AVCHD files aren’t supported right out of the gate–and allows it to deliver high bit rate video beyond the 24Mbps maximum for AVCHD. Plus, the camcorders include FireWire (i.Link) interfaces, which many of today’s models have dropped, for dealing with MPEG-2’s HDV-compatible datastream.
The three models also integrate new CMOS chips; I’ve been waiting to hear back from the company with some details about the chips both of the CMOS chips, a 1/4.5-inch, 1.75-megapixel version for the HD10 and a 1/3-inch, 2.68-megapixel version for the HD30/40 represent a significant switch for JVC, which usually uses low-resolution CCDs. The sensors for these models should be high enough resolution to deliver a decent HD image. However, the press information provided is odd. The press release states:
This CMOS uses proprietary interpolation technology based on what JVC developed for its 3CCD cameras. This algorithm makes it possible to generate virtual pixel data from the red, green, and blue physical pixels, thereby providing image information that actually surpasses what’s required for 1,920×1,080 Full HD imaging, or for.
Source: Crave
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