- CNET Editors' Rating 7.9/10 Very good Editorial policies >>
- Average user rating from 49 users 7.8/10 Very good Read user opinions >>
The good: Excellent image quality and color fidelity; 20X optical zoom; two-channel audio control; 1.7-megapixel still image capture; lightweight.
The bad: Too many controls per button; onboard microphone is omnidirectional; mediocre battery life with included cell.
The bottom line: This outstanding performer raises the bar for prosumer MiniDV camcorders.
Specs: Video input type: Camcorder; Optical zoom: 20 x; Media type: Mini DV See full specs >>
Price range: $1,499.00 - $2,799.00
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 09/23/2002
- Updated on:12/02/2002
- Released on: 07/15/2002
![]() Playback controls are located in a panel on the camera handle. |
This is a camcorder with a great deal of control to offer, but how to exercise that control isn't always apparent at first. You might forget, for instance, that to select one of the four programmed-exposure modes, you'll need to actuate a switch on the lower left side of the camera body, then push in the wheel labeled only Select (in other modes, it's used for other purposes), then choose from an onscreen menu. To do the same thing on the XL1S, you merely move the power-on switch to one of the four programmed-exposure modes inscribed on the camera body, with no menus or remembering necessary. Similarly, the GL2's grouping of the controls for gain, exposure, and shutter speed on one menu-driven dial seems a bit crowded to us.
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| The custom buttons allow one-touch activation of preprogrammed camera settings. | Only a speaker for playback and a Display button are hidden away behind the LCD. |
![]() The cassette hatch is a model of good design: its operation interferes with neither hand strap nor tripod. |
Although far more compact than the XL1S, like its big brother, the GL2 comes richly endowed and offers you ample discretion over how you employ its assets. Everything you'd ask of a prosumer camcorder is here--automatic and manual focus and exposure control, the latter augmented by programmed autoexposure settings to let you quickly adapt to a variety of shooting circumstances--in addition to standout features such as nearly two megapixels of still-photo resolution.
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| You can adjust exposure and other image parameters manually via easily reached controls. | Press the photo button, and you can shoot a 1.7-megapixel still, thanks to Canon's pixel shift technology. There's a USB port on the camera for quick transfers, too. |
Other notable refinements include SMPTE color bars that provide a reference for subsequent color correction, a neutral density filter, and variable zebra stripe pedestal levels that set the brightness level that triggers onscreen overexposure warnings. Canon has also added adjustable color gain, sharpness, and black level settings to the GL2, as well as shutter speed settings as slow as 1/8 of a second.
The camera's Clear Scan setting allows you to synchronize your camera's shutter speed with the scan rate of a computer or other monitor, thereby avoiding the rolling horizontal lines that otherwise mar shots including monitors. A pass-through analog-to-digital conversion mode lets you use the camera to convert analog signals to digital ones and record them directly to an external deck. You can even designate whether the flip-out LCD screen will or won't go into mirror mode when you turn it past a given point, a feature that may please makers of camera housings for underwater use, which sometimes require such control.
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| The GL2 retains its predecessor's excellent 20X zoom lens. | Included accessories. |
Looking at the GL2 feature set side by side with that of its larger sibling, you might suspect that you're practically getting an XL1S in a smaller package. Well, aside from the XL1S's interchangeable lens and viewfinder and higher-performance image stabilization, you just about are. And when the fixed optics on the smaller camera come from a company with the heritage of Canon, you're not likely to be disappointed. The 20X zoom lens, which the GL2 inherited from the GL1, not only offers magnification on a scale no other manufacturer offers in a fixed-lens prosumer camera, it also helps produce superb color fidelity. We wish only for a manual zoom ring set behind the existing focus ring.
![]() You can monitor your audio levels on the indicator window. |
The zoom motor is operable for traditional shooting with a right-side-mounted rocker switch, for very low shots with a top-handle-mounted set of buttons, and with the remote control. We found the rocker switch very easy to control and quite smooth, and the camera's variable zoom settings let you control how quickly the zoom motor accelerates in response to your touch.
![]() We were unsatisfied with the capacity of the supplied battery and believe you'll probably find yourself seeking a more powerful cell. |
![]() Input/output ports. |
The GL2's audio recording system includes meters and dials for separate control over two audio channels, with an option to add an adapter compatible with professional XLR terminated microphones. That option makes the GL2 look somewhat like the VX2000's DVCAM counterpart, the PD150a; however, Canon's optional audio adapter does not provide so-called phantom power--the mic you attach to it must be self-powered. Both zoom motor and tape transport were quiet, so as not to contaminate the sound track. Unfortunately, the mic is nearly omnidirectional. We wish the onboard stereo condenser microphone offered more sound rejection to the rear of the camera, rarely a place from which you want sound.
The 2.5-inch, flip-out LCD color screen mimics the one found on the VX2000, although this one wasn't very visible in direct sunlight. We found the EVF sharp and easy to use.
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| The GL2 comes with a large eyecup attachment to make the viewfinder easier to see in bright light, and you can adjust its focus with the diopter lever underneath, too. | You can store only six high-resolution photos on the supplied 8MB SD memory card, so you'll probably need to purchase a larger one. |
The GL2 produces pristine images and superior color fidelity within the limits of the DV medium. It stands toe-to-toe with Sony's VX2000 in this regard. Unlike Canon's XL1S, whose low-light performance faltered in our tests, the GL2 is every bit as good as the VX2000 under low-light conditions, producing noise-free blacks and handling candlelight with aplomb. This is likely the result of the new, higher-resolution CCDs Canon employs in the GL2 (380,000 effective pixels per CCD for the GL2 versus 250,000 for the XL1S), coupled with another step forward in Canon's pixel-shift technology and its fluorite lens. Canon claims fluorite helps prevent color aberrations that reduce sharpness, contrast, and saturation. We can't judge that claim, but we can say the GL2's color fidelity seemed superior even to the VX2000's high performance. The GL2 surprised us by resolving noticeable detail in cloud formations beset with glare--detail invisible to our unaided eyes.
![]() The GL2 captures sharp video with a pleasingly warm tone. |
![]() Even in low light, the camera produces vivid colors with little noise. |
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User opinions
WRITE YOUR OWN REVIEW How would you rate this product?
-
8/10 Excellent August 27, 2004
"Very good camera with one big problem" Read more >>
-
10/10 Perfect June 25, 2005
"best camera i've used" Read more >>
-
2/10 Terrible May 21, 2008
"Good video outside, very poor reliability" Read more >>
- WRITE YOUR OWN REVIEWSee all 49 user opinions >>
Where to buy
| Store | CNET Certified | In stock | Shipping | Price |
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Yes | $14.12 | $1,999.95 |
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Yes | Free | $1,939.00 |
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Yes | $12.49 | $2,199.99 |
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Yes | Free | $1,899.90 |
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Yes | $12.49 | $2,199.99 |
See Canon GL2 prices from 22 stores.




















