- Messages
- 26,272
- Reaction score
- 5,875
- # of dives
- I'm a Fish!
L&M makes a quality electronic housing - I almost bought one before I bought my Amphibico. Total maintenance cost/downtime on my housing since 2004 - zero. (except for rotating the o-rings periodically) I do between 25-100 dives/yr. and it goes on every dive.Hi thanks for the tips, right now I'm debating between a sony cx700 with a gate housing wich would come out to about 3000-3500 but it would be new with guarantee and everything.
Otherwise I got this deal second hand a Light and Motion housing with a retro fitted back plate LCD monitor, Sony A1-U camcorder and multiple standard, wide angle and macro ports. Also included is a Fathoms WA port which sells for $1800 just by itself. Selling the complete system for $2600 plus shipping.
I am still looking into the gopro3 but no one really has any reviews about it for the underwater performance but I do like the camera a lot I would equip it with this tray and maybe some better lights http://www.amazon.com/BigBlue-Underwater-Contour-Camcorder-included/dp/B0088QA5VW/ref=pd_sim_sbs_p_5
What do you guys think?
One thing about the A1U is that it's an older model and tape based so your video capture during editing will all be in real time - i.e. 30mins. of video capture takes 30 minutes to transfer. The advantage to the CX700 is that it's flash memory based storage so it transfers video much faster - it becomes an external drive transferring at USB 2.0 speed. Huge time saving during editing. Assuming you need to edit/produce a DVD fast - I wouldn't shoot tape for that reason.
Also you can store 10's of hours of footage on the CX700 at one of several HD resolutions - the A1U uses 60min. HDV/DV tapes - 40 min. if you shoot in DVCAM.
And it also doesn't have an HDMI output, they weren't available on prosumer camcorders then. You still get HD output thru the Component output - or to your computer via iLink - Sony's version of Firewire. And all the Audio XLR stuff has to be removed so it fits in the housing - so that's only useful on surface shoots.
While I can appreciate the image quality of the GoPro for the price, there are times when having the ability to zoom is nice. Sometimes you can't just get closer. Also without the Bacpac framing is just a best guess. There's also a workflow with the GoPro that (I believe) requires the use of their free CinePro program to convert video - IDK the details but I gather it's needed to edit with some editors.
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