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It’s very pricey. It feels like a brick. And at $1600 and jam-packed with high-end features, I hesitate to call Sony’s flagship Handycam a consumer model. This camcorder falls squarely between the consumer and the higher-end prosumer worlds. It’s one of the more compelling compact camcorders I've reviewed.
The best test of the HDR-PJ760V came out of the blue. A real-life drama proved this camcorder’s chops as a fully automatic point-and-shoot model. On the afternoon of Monday, August 8, I was in my home office in the El Cerrito hills. It overlooks the Chevron refinery site three miles northwest of me. I was getting this camcorder ready for a test when the Number 4 Crude Unit blew up, shooting flames into the sky and a plume of black smoke towering up to 3,000 feet. I dashed to my office window and let the camcorder rip. I shot in full-auto mode—no time to fool around with settings. You can see the results here:
This turned out to be a terrific test of the camcorder’s with battery like Dell Inspiron E1405 Battery , Dell TC023 Battery , Dell XPS M140 Battery , Dell PP19L Battery , dell Inspiron E1705 battery , dell Inspiron 6000 battery (dell 6000 battery ), dell Inspiron 9300 battery , dell Inspiron 9400 battery , dell 310-6321 battery ability to intelligently compensate for exposure and minimize artifacts in one of the most challenging shooting situations you can face: shooting directly into the sun. I had no time to attach the supplied lens hood—Sony needs to make that easier to snap on. Even so, the video shows almost no flare, you see almost no banding in the sky (a common artifact on non-pro, and even some pro cams), and the video has decent contrast. The unit's SteadyShot optical image stabilization also worked phenomenally well. I got very little motion jitter even though I was hanging out my bedroom window, constantly shifting to keep my bureau edge from gouging my hip.
Finally, the surround-sound stereo mics did a great job picking up the radio announcer across the room. I could easily make out the breaking news even though my radio was a dozen feet away and its volume was room level. Which brings me to one of my main beefs: It was too easy to cover up the top-mounted mics with my fingers, especially with both hands wrapped around the camcorder body. If you plan to do lots of shooting, consider an external mic, such as Sony’s optional shotgun mic (ECM-CG50, $240), which mounts onto the hot shoe.
This camcorder performed like a champ under tough conditions. It’s no surprise then that the HDR-PJ760V aced our lab- and home-based tests. For the full-light video tests, I shot in late afternoon with the sun behind me, shooting in AVCHD 1080/60i at 17Mbps. Video was very sharp and colors remarkably realistic—rich but without a trace of oversaturation—and I got very little blurring even when I panned quickly. Audio was similarly outstanding, full and clear sound with no tininess and almost no wind noise. Another nice surprise: I could keep shooting while tapping menu items to adjust settings on the fly.
In the low-light tests, video remained remarkably crisp, color accuracy stayed spot-on, and auto-focus struggled only occasionally. Photos were impressive, too—very sharp and with warm but not oversaturated colors. These shots are as good as, or even better than what I’ve seen on most dedicated still-shot cameras. This is not surprising given that you can shoot pictures up to a whopping 24.1MP of resolution, where the colors looked much warmer and richer than at the 12.3 and 2.1MP settings.