I know this may have been beaten to death but im new to the forum.. Whats better 7D vs 5Diii for video? Pros vs Cons
paul13walnut5 said:As a very happy 7D user, and assuming all other factors are equal... go for the 5D3.
More recent tech, better high ISO, better & more GOP options (DSLR video is either very compressed or very very very compressed, the 5D3 at least lets you choose the least bad option) and the option of RAW video output if you are really very serious. There is far less moire / aliasing on the 5D3 (do not believe anybody who tells you there is none) and there is a headphone socket for audio monitoring.
I'm going down the C100 route as video is more important to me that stills. And my 7D exceeds my ability and aspirations as a hobby stills photographer. If you are very serious about video you may want to look beyond a DSLR form.. The great thing about the c100 is that it is a more natural fit for my lenses.
There are somethings to be said for the 7D however:
Great at low isos and medium isos if you use 320, 640 etc.
Price.
Cheaper lenses, particularly at the UWA end.
Here's a big thing, depth of field. The object seems to be to get as little depth of field as possible, to emulate the so called film look...
Beaten to death. The film look also requires proper lighting, art direction (colour and light pull your attention, you want a closed set up, where you are in control of anything that is exposed, not at the mercy of mixed lighting etc) and as 135 / leica / minature format DSLRs have sensors that are larger than s35 movie film the effect is potentially more pronounced than you would ever see in a feature film.
I admire the flexibility that say an f1.2 50mm and 135 / leica / minature format DSLR gives you, but I can't imagine ever actually shooting at f1.2, unless the subject was a fair distance away and I really needed the low light capability.
I find that I get more managable depth of field with APS-c / s35 format sensors. You still get that great bokeh with the right lenses, you still get the great smooth fall off wide open, just your depth of field is significantly increased around the focus plane, a huge help when working close, you get most of the desired aesthetic, and less of the pain in the ass requirements for hyper critical focusing, the 7D and it's ilk are that bit more forgiving.
For example in an interview situation I would maybe use a 70-200 f2.8 (my version isn't parfocal, but thats a different issue) and I know that once my camera is set and the subject set that I'll usually have enough focus latitude to permit slight movements by the subject, as folk naturally do when talking.
On a 135 / leica / minature format DSLR you are going to have far less latitude, which may be tolerable on your rear monitor or 7" marshall, but will look awful on a 50" plasma or projected.
It is something to bear in mind.
The 5D3 is the better of the two cameras you mention, but for video, the 7D may be fractionally easier to work with in my experience, and if you are buying exclusively for video I would actually recommend something else altogether.
The form factor of DSLRs is terrible, with menus, controls on the wrong side, lens filtering etc, poor audio options. etc etc.
paul13walnut5 said:Reason 1. Resale value is (comparatively) rubbish.
Reason 2. What are you going to use if your 5D3 is dropped / breaks / gets stolen during a wedding.
Reason 3. What if you want to shoot video and take stills at the same time?
The 7D is a very good 2nd camera to have in your kit bag.
I would keep it around.
MonteGraham said:I know this may have been beaten to death but im new to the forum.. Whats better 7D vs 5Diii for video? Pros vs Cons
paul13walnut5 said:More recent tech, better high ISO, better & more GOP options (DSLR video is either very compressed or very very very compressed, the 5D3 at least lets you choose the least bad option) and the option of RAW video output if you are really very serious. There is far less moire / aliasing on the 5D3 (do not believe anybody who tells you there is none) and there is a headphone socket for audio monitoring...
The form factor of DSLRs is terrible, with menus, controls on the wrong side, lens filtering etc, poor audio options. etc etc.
MonteGraham said:I know this may have been beaten to death but im new to the forum.. Whats better 7D vs 5Diii for video? Pros vs Cons
Policar said:Both are awful by today's standards and incredibly by two year ago's. The 5D has three or so stops better low light, but both look fine at low ISOs. The sensor is obviously bigger. There's no aliasing or moire. Both are very soft and flat and difficult to post with and have mediocre DR.
Long story short, get an C100 (or better).
LetTheRightLensIn said:Policar said:Both are awful by today's standards and incredibly by two year ago's. The 5D has three or so stops better low light, but both look fine at low ISOs. The sensor is obviously bigger. There's no aliasing or moire. Both are very soft and flat and difficult to post with and have mediocre DR.
Long story short, get an C100 (or better).
why not just load up ML RAW???
cinema-dslr said:even the c100 is crippled with a non broadcast codec but with a ninja you get to a broadcast level.
paul13walnut5 said:cinema-dslr said:even the c100 is crippled with a non broadcast codec but with a ninja you get to a broadcast level.
Dang! Dang & Blast. I don't know of any camcorders other than some settings on P2 and XDCAM that actually shoot in a broadcast codec (certain settings of MPEG2 for most digital broadcasts)
I've never quite understood the term 'broadcast codec' in relation to cameras. And I've had stuff broadcast shot on dv dvcam hdv digibeta xdcam xdcamhd dvcpro dvcpro50 HDCAM EOS H.264.
I know certainly the broadcast editors I work with wouldn't generally thank you for RAW files. I think it's this years trick.
I wouldn't get too hung up on what broadcast quality is. The C100 is. A 10 year old z1 is. The key is the intermediate and editing codecs. It'll be squished back to MPEG2 levels anyway before broadcast.
cinema-dslr said:paul13walnut5 said:cinema-dslr said:even the c100 is crippled with a non broadcast codec but with a ninja you get to a broadcast level.
Dang! Dang & Blast. I don't know of any camcorders other than some settings on P2 and XDCAM that actually shoot in a broadcast codec (certain settings of MPEG2 for most digital broadcasts)
I've never quite understood the term 'broadcast codec' in relation to cameras. And I've had stuff broadcast shot on dv dvcam hdv digibeta xdcam xdcamhd dvcpro dvcpro50 HDCAM EOS H.264.
I know certainly the broadcast editors I work with wouldn't generally thank you for RAW files. I think it's this years trick.
I wouldn't get too hung up on what broadcast quality is. The C100 is. A 10 year old z1 is. The key is the intermediate and editing codecs. It'll be squished back to MPEG2 levels anyway before broadcast.
Yes i know i've shot plenty of stuff on dv that got broadcast but thats not really the point .
The codec from the c100 is pretty good and really efficient but allot of data gets trown away during compression wich will show up in editing during grading etc..
With the ninja you get 4:2:2 in a edit ready codec so no need to do any conversion.
paul13walnut5 said:cinema-dslr said:paul13walnut5 said:cinema-dslr said:even the c100 is crippled with a non broadcast codec but with a ninja you get to a broadcast level.
Dang! Dang & Blast. I don't know of any camcorders other than some settings on P2 and XDCAM that actually shoot in a broadcast codec (certain settings of MPEG2 for most digital broadcasts)
I've never quite understood the term 'broadcast codec' in relation to cameras. And I've had stuff broadcast shot on dv dvcam hdv digibeta xdcam xdcamhd dvcpro dvcpro50 HDCAM EOS H.264.
I know certainly the broadcast editors I work with wouldn't generally thank you for RAW files. I think it's this years trick.
I wouldn't get too hung up on what broadcast quality is. The C100 is. A 10 year old z1 is. The key is the intermediate and editing codecs. It'll be squished back to MPEG2 levels anyway before broadcast.
Yes i know i've shot plenty of stuff on dv that got broadcast but thats not really the point .
The codec from the c100 is pretty good and really efficient but allot of data gets trown away during compression wich will show up in editing during grading etc..
With the ninja you get 4:2:2 in a edit ready codec so no need to do any conversion.
4:2;2, why not 4:4:4? What about all those I's & Os you are chucking away?
Your folk who care that the canon codec is 4:2:0 should by rights care that your ninja codec is 4:2:2.
Seriously man, if you care enough to understand depth sampling to this degree, then you'd know which is 'broadcast' and which isn't.
And what do you mena by grading? Colour correction? Manipulation of Gamma Scale? Gamut?
Of course the conservative broadcast safe limits seriously restrict even current or old DR range cameras.
Fixing WB isn't grading.
Adding a vignette isn't grading.
And even converting 4:2:0 to 4:2:2 isn't actualy adding anything, much like converting 4:2:2 to 4:4:4 isn't really fooling anybody but yourself, certanly not resolve.
cinema-dslr said:even the c100 is crippled with a non broadcast codec but with a ninja you get to a broadcast level.
the 5dm3 can do the same via hdmi-mini-out but that conector is so flimsy its just not safe enough to rely on.