Comparing Canon XL H1, JVC GY-HD100, Panasonic AG-HVX200, and Sony HVR-Z1
http://www.adamwilt.com/HD/4cams-part2.html
This is the image that shows that HDV looks great for the most part but falls apart when the "shit hits the fan" (or rock hits the water...):
http://www.adamwilt.com/HD/4cams-part2-framegrabs/TX-67-XLH1.jpg
Having worked with all those cams (and CCing significan amount of stuff from JVC and Panasonic) i would have to say that they are all a joke on big screen, but if i was given a free camera today i would go with Panasonic, but because i like to work with the 35mm adapters and Panasonic is fixed lens i would go with JVC or Canon to attach it to a 35mm rig (especially since the 35mm lenses help to take away the over all sharpness of the frame thus "reducing" the amount of details in the frame thus "helping" the codec to be more efficient).
(i shoot lots of music videos/low budget commercials and low end narratives)
http://www.adamwilt.com/HD/4cams-part2.html
This is the image that shows that HDV looks great for the most part but falls apart when the "shit hits the fan" (or rock hits the water...):
http://www.adamwilt.com/HD/4cams-part2-framegrabs/TX-67-XLH1.jpg
Having worked with all those cams (and CCing significan amount of stuff from JVC and Panasonic) i would have to say that they are all a joke on big screen, but if i was given a free camera today i would go with Panasonic, but because i like to work with the 35mm adapters and Panasonic is fixed lens i would go with JVC or Canon to attach it to a 35mm rig (especially since the 35mm lenses help to take away the over all sharpness of the frame thus "reducing" the amount of details in the frame thus "helping" the codec to be more efficient).
(i shoot lots of music videos/low budget commercials and low end narratives)