Українська    |   English
На первую страницуКарта сайтаСвязаться с нами
Engineer-Service Ltd.
News About company Service-centre OB Van/SNG Rental Library Contact us

Catalogue

Cameras & Camcorders
Recorders
Monitors
Video Mixers & DSKs
Routing and signal distribution systems
Compression and transportation system
Sync & Timecode Generators
Modular Infrastructure
Controllers
Teleprompters
Lenses
Tripods
Camera support system
Matteboxes
Power supply solutions
Lighting equipment
Digital media systems for Broadcast and Newsrooms
Archive solutions
Audio equipment
Measurement equipment
Graphics systems
Intercom
Cables and accessories
Satellite systems
Video replay and multichannel recording systems
Recording media
Video conference
Equipment


Rent Equipment
Contact us
Vacancies
Forum
Our projects


Login
Password
Register »
Forgot password
 

Engineering Service, Inc.   »  News 
 
News




Panasonic unveiled two new versatile 4K 60p camcorders at IBC2022. The HC-X2 and HC-X20, designed for professional broadcast and video creation.
 
 

It’s been a while since ENG crews routinely lugged around 3-chip broadcast cameras, and while some of us might miss the sheer joy of a 20:1 mechanical zoom, the ability to throw the entire camera package in a carry-on and stroll through airports not being followed by a wagon train of Pelican cases is more than compensation enough. Panasonic has just announced a new pair of cameras to address exactly that market, expanding its HC series with the HC-X2 and HC-X20.

In common with previous models, shorter numbers mean more features – it’s the same platform, but the X2 adds HLG and V-Log plus some new networked capabilities. The cameras appear to be a succession to something like the HC-X2000, announced in early 2020, which lacked any mention of those more advanced brightness handling systems, though the imaging capability is somewhat similar. The company’s term for the sensor is “1.0-type,” hinting at the fact that you’ll struggle to find a one-inch measurement anywhere near the sensor. Most likely, it’s an active area a shade less than 16mm on the diagonal, from the old vacuum tube nomenclature.

Whether or not 4K on a sensor that size sounds like fun in a one-operator, handheld documentary camera, the new cameras add face-detection autofocus, controlled from the touchscreen. The 4-lens drive system and five-axis optical stabilisation from the X2000 series is retained, which is probably a good idea given the long, 20:1 zoom (there’s that number again). There are three mechanical rings for proper controllability, though inevitably it’s at least somewhat electronically-actuated and the performance of servo lenses is a somewhat interpretive matter. The X2000, at least, was a good example of the breed.

While the X20 lacks the HLG and V-Log options, one of the bigger updates to these cameras is the improved picture control. Both have a variety of brightness handling options, but perhaps more importantly what we might call a vector correction or matrix-related colour processing feature. These are, after all, broadcast cameras, and especially given the option to live stream them it’s appropriate that they have at least the ability to be matched against other, different devices. It’s a feature that might once have been overlooked as lacking relevance to most people, although with the explosion in popularity of live streaming over 2020 and 2021, and the ever-increasing production value of online video, it’s no bad thing.

The HC-X1500 (with its removable handle) and X2000 were designed to be very small and very light. The latter weighed in at only a kilo and a half, not even three and a half pounds, which might make the comparison with the X2 and X20 slightly less direct; Panasonic doesn’t seem to have published a weight, but describes the cameras as being “weight-balanced,” so they may not be quite so featherweight as their predecessors, if we want to consider the four-digit models their predecessors.

Panasonic noted that X2 and X20 will be cost-friendly. In general, these cameras are likely to be bought by the armload by Panasonic-loyal broadcasters with a need for ultra-lightweight newsgathering, as well as people shooting industrials and documentaries, and, based on the available information, they’re likely to do it all quite nicely.

 



« To the list of news  
New
Camera-top light
Zylight Newz
 
Extended search



 посилання на FaceBook
QR код посилання на FaceBook

посилання на twitter
QR код посилання на FaceBook


 






    +38 (044) 593-18-20
+38 (073) 593-18-20
+38 (096) 532-96-82
+38 (095) 532-96-82
Service center Telegram @Engineer_Service
  Copyright © Engineer-Service Ltd.
All rights reserved


   Developed by ROMART, 2007
 
 
    e-mail: engineer-service.tv
15 Vavylovykh str., Kiev, 04060, Ukraine
Authorized service centre of Panasonic, Sony, JVC, Fujinon, Canon