Originally posted by Aeteocles:
quote:
Originally posted by jhe888:
If it is primarily for video, why not buy a video camera? Video is an afterthought on DSLRs. It is getting to be a pretty good afterthought, but a dedicated video camera will be better.
DSLRs and Mirrorless have already long reached the point where they surpass consumer handheld camcorders.
The Canon T7i puts out 60Mbps video bitrate versus the 35Mbps usually found in consumer handheld camcorders. Higher video bitrate = cleaner images. For a while, this was the bottleneck as it took alot of CPU power to downsample a 12mp image into a 2.1mp video without overheating, and the compromise was to simply lower the amount of data that actually needed to get downsampled.
The other bottleneck was auto focus. Many photo lenses just couldn't focus fast enough or did so with too much noise. It was just easier to make tiny little lenses focus quickly, and you only needed tiny little lenses on a camcorder because the sensor size is miniscule, like 1/2.8". But lens technology is catching up--you've got silent magnetic focusing motors on lenses now, and lenses are being sized down specifically for APS-C and MFT sensors to reduce the amount of mass that needs to move in order focus.
Essentially, I can't really see what a consumer handheld camcorder brings to the table that an iPhone doesn't. Perhaps there's greater dynamic range because they only need to squeeze like 3mp onto a 1/2.8" sensor so each pixel might be bigger, or a zoom motor for smooth zoom...but that's about all I can come up with from the top of my head.