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HD recording formats: 720p and 1080i

Example products Sony Handycam HDR-FX1
Sony Handycam HDR-FX1


Canon XL H1
Canon XL H1


Sony Handycam HDR-HC7
Sony Handycam HDR-HC7


Canon XH G1
Canon XH G1

Sony Handycam HDR-UX7
Sony Handycam HDR-UX7


Sony Handycam HDR-SR1
Sony Handycam HDR-SR1


Sony Handycam HDR-CX7
Sony Handycam HDR-CX7


Panasonic HDC-DX1
Panasonic HDC-DX1


Panasonic HDC-SD1
Panasonic HDC-SD1


Panasonic AG-HVX200
Panasonic AG-HVX200
Recording format HDV
Note: The HDV format specification supports both 720p and 1080i recording, but camcorders can generally record only one or the other--usually 1080i.
Sony/Panasonic AVCHD Panasonic DVCPro HD (a.k.a. DVCPro 100)
Supported media types Tape Flash, DVD, hard disk Tape, Flash (Panasonic P2), external hard drive
Format details MPEG-2 inter- and intraframe compressed to fit on a standard MiniDV tape and use the same bit rate.
Max bit rate: 25Mbps
Capture resolution: 1,440x1,080/1,280x720
Encoding resolution: 1,920x1,080/1,280x720
Color sampling: 4:2:0
Variable frame rate: no
An HD version of the MPEG-4 Advanced Visual Codec--not to be confused with MPEG HD--which uses the H.264 compression scheme.
Max bit rate: 24Mbps
Capture resolution: 1,920x1,080/1,280x720
Encoding resolution: 1,920x1,080/1,280x720
Color sampling: 4:2:0
Variable frame rate: yes
MPEG-2 inter- and intraframe compressed to fit on a standard DVCPro tape and stream at the same bit rate.
Max bit rate: 100Mbps
Capture resolution: 1,920x1,080/1,280x720
Encoding resolution: 1,280x1,080/960x720
Color sampling: 4:2:2
Variable frame rate: yes
Hardware issues Same limitations as all tape formats: must be converted to files for editing or connected directly to TV. HD video of DVD-based models are incompatible with older players and will likely have some growing pains with respect to new ones. In theory, they should be compatible with Blu-ray and future players with explicit AVCHD support built in. None
Video-editing issues Can be slow and tedious to work with because of time required to download to computer. Software supporting AVCHD video editing has only recently appeared on the market, and the highly compressed video stream requires quite a bit of hardware horsepower for real-time editing. As you might imagine, the video files produced can be huge and therefore cumbersome to capture and edit.