|
Welcome to Studentfilms.com, the online film discussion forum for filmmakers and students who are applying to film school, attending film school, need advice on making films, or just want to share their films with the world.
Go  | New  | Find  | Notify  | | Reply  | | Admin  | New PM!  |
Graduate

| Evan - I know the whole deal about the consequences of switching camera tapes. The first time I had to send it back, it was because I was using cheap maxell tapes that screwed up the heads, then, when the GL1 was repaired, I started using high quality non-lubricant panasonic tapes, and after about a month, it started to get the same problem. My father's GL1 that he got from his office had the problem as well, and he only used high quality tapes, and now, not suprisingly, my friend's GL2 is having those problems. With that being said, I do believe there is a lot of truth in my statement that Canon is inferior in its manufacturing department. I've had my DVX100a for over 7 months now and haven't had a single problem with it. Trust me people, stay away from Canon! | | | | Posts: 912 | Location: Chicago | Registered: April 02, 2003 |  
IP
|
|
Sophomore

| You guys should read your manuals... I have a GL2 and I had the same problem, I read the manual. When you encounter black bars and blue screens that's the camera telling you to clean the heads, it does this every 20 hours of use aprox. What this means is that when the heads are dirty you are recording inferior picture quality, so clean the heads. It's only fair to assume that a high end camera is going to need constant maintenance. Just like a high end hollywood overpayed moviestar! When I bought my camera I payed for xtra professional cleanings but you can use a cleaning tape instead. (60$ canadian) It sucks, but it makes sense doesn't it?
__________________________
Meatloaf F*CK!!! -Wedding Crashers
| | | | Posts: 295 | Location: Montreal, Quebec | Registered: April 27, 2004 |  
IP
|
|
Moderator

| I have both an XL1 and a GL2... The problem has never happened with the XL1, and only happened one time with the GL2. (A simple cleaning tape easily fixed it)
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
| | | |
Graduate
| I've had a GL1 for three years now and it's never done it. You should be cleaning the heads and using somewhat better tape brands.
I use Panasonic Master tapes, but you have to get them online since they're only 5 dollars each online. At a store they're about 20 dollars each.
And clean the head. I do it after every shoot I have, because we usually shoot for three days 10-14 hours a day straight and then the camera goes back into the case while i do all the post.
Don't get a more expensive camera if you're not going to take proper care of it.
Also, if you're shooting outside a lot, like in the woods, the beach, etc. Camcorders are made to record birthday parties and weddings, not make movies with, so you're going to have to stay away from certain things and cover your camera up when you're running around getting smoke and forest soil on it, or else get used to wrecking cameras every few months. | | | | Posts: 844 | Location: Miami | Registered: January 13, 2004 |  
IP
|
|
Alumnus

| If your video heads are getting dirty, the problem could be with your tape stock. Different brands use different amounts and kinds of lubricants on their tapes. Sony, for example, uses a lot of lubricant which really gunks up video heads pretty fast. Panasonic makes really good tapes; that's all I use. And I think Canons are pretty bad in general. Canon makes sweet optics, but they don't know how to engineer well-designed products. | | | |
 | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
|
|