Ok, guys, I thought I'd pass along a few observations that have been confirmed by others.
You may remember I bought a JVC JY-HD10 HDV camcorder when I was still working for Ulead... in 2004.
I used the camcorder to test the then-new Ulead HDV plug-in for the version 7 of MediaStudio Pro.
The Ulead plug-in seemed to work okay.
However, I did run into a very unexpected problem with the files captured from the JVC camcorder, which I have sold.
I used MediaStudio Pro's NTSC DVD templates to down-convert the 720/30p 1280 x 720 HDV video to be compliant with 29.97 SD DVD standards.
I still have native HDV files and the SD MPEG-2 files that resulted from the down-conversion.
The big surprise comes when you burn these down-converted files to DVD and then play the DVD on an interlaced SD TV set.
Whenever there is motion, there is an unbelievably annoying moire pattern that manifests itself on the interlaced display.
I've down-converted the MPEG-4 files generated by the SANYO HD1 and I've burned them to a DVD and I think I'm seeing the same problem, but due to the nature of the scenes, and their lack of motion, it's more difficult to see.
But the point is this:
If you think you're going to be able to take a PROGRESSIVE output from an HD consumer format camcorder and then expect the down-converted video to look great on all types of TV screens, particularly SD interlaced screens, you may be in for a big, nasty surprise.
The video produced by these camcorders looks fine on progressive displays.
Jerry Jones
You may remember I bought a JVC JY-HD10 HDV camcorder when I was still working for Ulead... in 2004.
I used the camcorder to test the then-new Ulead HDV plug-in for the version 7 of MediaStudio Pro.
The Ulead plug-in seemed to work okay.
However, I did run into a very unexpected problem with the files captured from the JVC camcorder, which I have sold.
I used MediaStudio Pro's NTSC DVD templates to down-convert the 720/30p 1280 x 720 HDV video to be compliant with 29.97 SD DVD standards.
I still have native HDV files and the SD MPEG-2 files that resulted from the down-conversion.
The big surprise comes when you burn these down-converted files to DVD and then play the DVD on an interlaced SD TV set.
Whenever there is motion, there is an unbelievably annoying moire pattern that manifests itself on the interlaced display.
I've down-converted the MPEG-4 files generated by the SANYO HD1 and I've burned them to a DVD and I think I'm seeing the same problem, but due to the nature of the scenes, and their lack of motion, it's more difficult to see.
But the point is this:
If you think you're going to be able to take a PROGRESSIVE output from an HD consumer format camcorder and then expect the down-converted video to look great on all types of TV screens, particularly SD interlaced screens, you may be in for a big, nasty surprise.
The video produced by these camcorders looks fine on progressive displays.
Jerry Jones
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