Canon HV20 Review

£690Jun 2007

Stuff says 5 Hot Buy

Ugly but impressive. If you’re looking for glory at Cannes, this is the camcorder for you

Images

Stuff magazine Tue, Jun 12 2007, 6:00AM

Canon’s latest top-range camcorder didn’t so much fall from the ugly tree as hit every perfectly-pixellated branch on the way down. And, in this hard-drive age, it even has the temerity to merely record onto old-school Mini DV tape. Yet the HV20 has one feature that’s got hardcore videographers very hot under the collars of their multipocketed weskits: 24P.

Old classic
By shooting at the same frame rate as proper 35mm film cameras, it's suddenly a viable, and extremely cheap, option for budget film-makers. Combine it with its 'Cinema' mode and you'll get something approaching mightily expensive film – if a little more Pinewood than Hollywood.

The lower frame rate that 24P uses also gives the Canon amazing low-light ability. In fact, for anything other than fast moving sports, we'd recommend keeping it on at all times. Things just look better.

The unforgiving resolution of HD makes accurate focus even more critical. Luckily, the HV20’s provides stellar autofocus performance thanks to its ‘Instant AF’, which combines a blunt quick-fix sensor below the flash with standard in-lens AF for fine-tuning.

In control
There's tons of other stuff to keep the pros happy, including the next best thing to an actual focus ring; a focus dial on the lens. Lazy pros can just stay in auto with its surprisingly fast and accurate autofocus and white balance.

The fact that it records to old-school Mini DV tape will also be a positive in the eyes of film-makers. Tapes are cheap and plentiful, although you do have to transfer them to a PC in real-time.

The only real downside is the build. It looks plasticy and feels flimsy (the zoom rocker is pathetic and the hot shoe door is prone to jettisoning), but think instead of the final results. That and the knowing looks you'll get from other smug users. Don't speak, just nod back – knowingly.

Comments

  1. doibi

    1 year ago

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  2. Plasma

    5 years ago

    Having owned the Canon HV20 for a number of months I can add to review that the real downsides are not only the looks but there are one or two annoying  features. While the hotshoe is always welcome on any camcorder the cover is a pain. It needs a fingernail to remove and can easily fall and get lost. But for me the worst downside is the static viewfinder. For users not wearing glasses is bad enough finding that your nose is pressed against the battery, and it is difficult to find the controls whilst in this position. Wear glasses dont bother! Use the screen. These niggles apart the main reason for buying this camcorder is the quality of its output,and having owned dozens of consumer quality cams in my time this is quids up on anything I have used!! I use Sony HD Quality DV Tapes which compliment this machine perfectly. While this is not the most aesthetically pleasing camcorder,watching its output through the HDMI socket on your TV your jaw will drop open at the quality. The Canon HV20 they can now be found a lot cheaper than the £620 I paid for mine so go and get one.

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Tech Specs

Dimensions
81x89x137mm
LCD Size
2.7in
Maximum movie resolution
1920x1080i
Megapixels
3MP
Optical viewfinder
No
Weight
595g