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The camcorders, due in September, feature Leica lenses and 10x optical zooms with a new optical image stabilization system that the company says offers eight times the stabilization compensation of the previous system. Both models are EZ Sync compatible and feature a new wide-angle 2.7-inch LCD screen with a two-level power function to boost brightness for outdoor viewing.
The HDC-SD5, for a suggested $999 retail price, records video to SDHC memory cards. It features a new USB Host function that lets the camcorder connect to the company’s new DVD burner (the VW-BN1 for a suggested $199) to burn HD video to traditional DVDs for playback on select Blu-ray Disc players. Panasonic says it is the world's smallest palm-style 3CCD full-HD camcorder, measuring just 2.6 x 2.6 x 5.3 inches.
The $899-suggested HDC-SX5 is a hybrid model that records to both SDHC and standard DVD discs. According to Panasonic, an 8GB SDHC card can store up to 180 minutes of video while a 3-inch DVD-R dual layer can hold an hour of HD video in HE mode (6MBps) for a total of 240 minutes of HD footage. It can transfer video from an SDHC card to a DVD internally or record standard-definition video to DVD disc in MPEG2 format.
To complement both models, Panasonic also launched an 8GB SDHC card with a Class 6 speed rating, to sell for about $159.
Both camcorders have a several new features, including a new processing engine to reduce power consumption, and prerecording, which captures three seconds worth of video to buffer memory prior to the start of recording. A new intelligent contrast control adjusts contrast by measuring ambient light in a scene.
The camcorders will be packaged with software for editing HD video and saving it in either AVCHD format or DVD-video format. (info from Panasonic and TWICE)
THIS IS A PREVIEW, NOT A REVIEW.
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