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Posted by Richard Crowley on 07/02/07 03:24
"Mark & Mary Ann Weiss" wrote ...
> You're the first person, out of dozens who've responded to my posts
> about
> this issue, who actually understands the technical aspects of this,
> such
> that the absurdness of this "bell curve" frequency response on the V1U
> is as
> obvious to you as it is to me.
Or perhaps we understand full well but are afraid that
you (and everyone else who buys one of those camcorders)
is just stuck with it. If you can't fight City Hall, fighting a
humongous international corp is even more daunting.
> Unfortunately, we seem to be in rare company.
> Nobody else gives a darn about this.
I would feel just as angry, disgusted, and ripped-off as you
do. Alas I don't know that there is anything practical we can
do about except maybe a class-action against Sony. But you
would need some kind of legal spec to hang your hat on. But
Sony seems to have created themselves a giant loophole by
not publishing any audio performance specs.
> What I am realizing is that these modern cameras are, at their
> foundation,
> digital computers. And we all know how 'reliable' computers are.
> However, I
> have not encountered any reliability problems with my two V1Us. Their
> performance has been consistent. I only use their audio for synch
> reference,
> but I can see from the editor timeline that it is not missing of
> dropping
> out anywhere during a shoot. And if you are not observing this problem
> on
> the other 5 cameras, then if I were in your situation, I would send
> that
> camera in for service, with a detailed description of the problem. It
> sounds
> like there might be a bad solder joint somewhere that is affecting the
> digital signal path.
The description of FS digital noise is a common symptom
of an audio bitstream that has lost synchronization. It makes
me think that the codec is not as robust as it should be to
try to take that much video and audio data and squeze it
into the 25MB/s bandwidth of DV.
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