davidpanal 0 #1 March 22, 2009 Hi guys, I always fly camera in europe so all my cameras PV101 are european format. This summer I will be in the USA and I think these cameras do not work for the US customers, true? Also many cameramen started to use tapeless cameras, which one is good and not so expensive? Can these cameras work both in Europe and in the US? I thank you all for your advices. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DSE 5 #2 March 22, 2009 PAL cameras work in the US, but they won't interface with anything but a computer, and they're slow to convert to NTSC for DVD delivery to students. You'll likely want to purchase a 60i camcorder that is compatible with both computers and analog equipment. As far as a camera, a few minutes searching around this forum will provide you with many answers... http://www.dropzone.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi?post=3450879#3450879 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
goobersnuftda 0 #3 March 23, 2009 Here is something that might help you but it involves conversion through a video editor. Good old Gmail, always keep copies of these things in my account, never know when you will use them again. ======================== One great undocumented feature of Sony DV camcorders is that they ALL play back NTSC or PAL tapes without a hitch. If only we were all interested in playback, that would be enough. It gets complicated, though. For example, a true-blue Sony NTSC DV camcorder will play back NTSC tapes fine, but PAL tapes are output as NTSC50. NTSC50 is NOT a legit signal and beffudles any attempts at analogue capture (including but not limited to the analogue inputs of DVD recorders), so we stop right there. DV capture through FireWire is just as complicated: the camcorder tells the Non Linear Editor that it's NTSC, so the Non Linear Editor preps for such. Then along comes the PAL signal which gives it fits. There is a way around this in Premiere. Turn Device Control off in capture. Premiere then becomes interested ONLY in the incoming DV stream itself, not whether the camcorder is this or that. Alternatively, as was pointed out, don't give a chance to Premiere to figure out the camcorder type by putting it in play/pause mode BEFORE either plugging into the FireWire port or starting the NLE program. So what I did was open Premiere and create a new PAL project. Then went to Device Control (Edit/Preferences/Device Control) and changed my Devices to None. Then I hooked up my NTSC PC330 via firewire with my pal tape in it and put it in Play/Edit mode and pressed play. Then you just open the capture window (File/Capture) and the video will be playing there. Just hit the record button and it will capture your PAL footage. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DSE 5 #4 March 23, 2009 Quote There is a way around this in Premiere. Turn Device Control off in capture. Premiere then becomes interested ONLY in the incoming DV stream itself, not whether the camcorder is this or that. Alternatively, as was pointed out, don't give a chance to Premiere to figure out the camcorder type by putting it in play/pause mode BEFORE either plugging into the FireWire port or starting the NLE program. So what I did was open Premiere and create a new PAL project. Then went to Device Control (Edit/Preferences/Device Control) and changed my Devices to None. Then I hooked up my NTSC PC330 via firewire with my pal tape in it and put it in Play/Edit mode and pressed play. Then you just open the capture window (File/Capture) and the video will be playing there. Just hit the record button and it will capture your PAL footage. Great tip/great reminder! All NLE systems (in the consumer/Pro-sumer space) do this, but some are much easier. With Sony Vegas or Canopus Edius, simply plug in the camera; the application recognizes it's 50i or 60i when the stream comes in. But I think David's question is more relevant to non-computer related issues, ie; you can't use a PAL camera with analog NTSC editing boards, and you can't do a one-touch burn to a DVD that will play in a student's DVD player. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ishdaddy 0 #5 March 23, 2009 I brought all my cameras from Europe and they work just fine in the US, as well as I brought my US cameras to Europe during my trips and they work fine as well. The only thing I do is to change the mode before recording if I want to watch my recordings on TV. Now, when I have to make a DVD, I need to use a Computer as DSE said. Don’t forget to bring with you or buy here an outlet converter plug, remember that in Europe we use round outlets and here in the US we use rectangle outlets. Enjoy your visit to the US, Ish. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites