Panasonic AG-HMC70,
Industry's First Professional AVCHD Shoulder-Mount Camcorder, Ships in April
2008
An
Affordable, Second-Generation Professional HD Camcorder
Press Release
February 13, 2008 Source: Studio
Daily
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Panasonic announced today that the AG-HMC70, the
industry’s first AVCHD shoulder-mount
camcorder, will be available in April at a suggested list
price of $2,995. Joining the AG-HSC1U
handheld in Panasonic’s professional AVCHD line-up,
the HMC70 provides institutional customers,
event videographers, and web content producers full high
definition quality, professional audio and
video connectivity, and the fast production workflow
offered by tapeless SD card recording. Used
to capture important events or send live widescreen video
to a projector or flat screen display, the HMC70 is as easy to use as a
digital still camera. The HMC70 is the
latest product in our professional AVCHD camcorder line,” said Robert
Harris, Vice President of Marketing, Panasonic Broadcast. ”AVCHD is a
new industry-standard camera recording format, introduced by Panasonic and
Sony &
now supported by over 30 different
manufacturers.”
"This second generation HD format utilizes MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 compression
and offers significant improvements in bandwidth efficiency and image quality
over older MPEG-2 based systems such as HDV,” Harris said.
“Implemented by Panasonic in professional camcorders using standard
consumer SD cards, the Panasonic Professional AVCHD camcorder line offers a
highly affordable HD video recording solution with tremendous advantages over
older tape based products. Unlike HDV, AVCHD content can be captured on a
standard SD card and played immediately in a growing number of inexpensive
consumer products such as Blu-ray players, game machines, computers, and
plasma displays. Now supported by most of the leading NLE products, AVCHD
content can also be edited and rendered to almost any format or media. It is
a fast and easy way for schools, churches, and businesses to enjoy the
advantages of high definition video recording.”
The HMC70 utilizes the AVCHD High Profile video codec, which offers similar
image quality to HDV 1080i but uses about half the bandwidth. This means
longer recording times and half the storage requirement. Since the HMC70 uses
standard SD cards, unlike tape, recording capacity will increase with higher
capacity reusable cards, offers random access without fast forward or
rewinding, and content is immediately available to editing systems without
the ingest delay and additional cost of a playback deck.
The HMC70’s 3-CCD ¼” progressive image system captures 1080i HD,
16:9 images with excellent sensitivity, superb color reproduction and
resolution. The camera is equipped with a 12X 38.5mm to 462mm (35mm
equivalent) Leica Dicomar™ wide-angle zoom lens, one-push Auto Focus,
and integrated Optical Image Stabilization (O.I.S.) that ensures stable
images, critical to high definition video display. Professionals can also
capture 2.1 Megapixel still images with the camcorder, even during video
recording.
With the release of higher-capacity SD cards, professionals have the ability
to continuously record for hours. Users can record in one of the camera’s
three recording modes – 6Mbps, 9Mbps or 13Mbps. The HMC70 can record
over 2.6 hours at 13Mbps, the HMC70’s highest quality mode, or up to 6
hours at 6Mbps, the camera’s extended recording mode — all on
just one 16GB SDHC memory card. In addition, solid-state SD card recording
eliminates mechanical wear associated with tape, optical disc, or hard drive
based systems.
The HMC70 has a professional, yet lightweight, shoulder mount design that
enables exceptionally stable shooting during long recording sessions. The
HMC70 is equipped with Y/Pb/Pr BNC connections for playback or live feeds to
video projectors or large displays for presenter magnification use in
auditoriums and other large venues. It also has high quality audio features
such as two locking XLR inputs with switches for mic/line, +48V Phantom
Power, Auto/Manual level, mic attenuation, and front/rear assignment. It also
features a headphone volume control to match the camera’s output to the
shooters’ stereo headphones.
AVCHD editing is currently supported by numerous leading NLE companies on
both PC and Mac platforms. In addition, AVCHD can be easily converted to P2
DVCPRO HD for editing on existing systems using a free AVCHD transcoder
available on the Panasonic Broadcast web site, or transferred as uncompressed
HD video utilizing a simple HDMI to HD-SDI converter.
The HMC70 comes standard with HD Writer software and a 2GB SD card. Optional
accessories include a VW-VBG260 battery pack (7.2V 2,640mAh), VW-VBG6 battery
pack (7.2V 5,800mAh), VW-AD20 AC adaptor, VW-LDC102 Light, VW-LF43N Filter
Kit, VW-W4307H Wide Conversion Lens and a VW-T4314H Tele Conversion Lens.
About AVCHD
Panasonic’s AVCHD camera line brings the benefits of solid-state
recording to budget-conscious professionals. Based on MPEG-4 AVC/H.264
technology, AVCHD delivers twice the recording efficiency of older MPEG-2
codec technologies like HDV, ensuring crisp and clear HD images with
exceptional color and motion performance. Like digital still photography,
recording onto an SD/SDHC card offers a fast and simple IT-compatible
workflow, with ultra-reliable performance due to resistance to shock,
vibration and extreme temperatures and weather. SD and SDHC memory cards are
inexpensive and widely available and can be reused repeatedly. Since AVCHD
records video as digital data files, content can be transferred and stored on
affordable, high-capacity hard disk drives (HDD) and optical storage media
and transferred to new ones as advanced technology is introduced in the
future.
Sid Rodrigue
Broadcast, Cable TV, and A/V Consultant
E-Mail:
srodrigue@mpi-itec.com
Media Products of Atlanta, Inc.
1235 Old Alpharetta Road, Suite 130
Alpharetta, GA 30005
PHN: 770-772-4252, ext 18
FAX: 770-772-6583
CELL: 770-842-9927
Please pray on this day, and every day, for our patriot Armed Forces
standing in harm's way around the world in the defense of our liberty,
and for the families waiting for their safe return.
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