3 comments

  1. 94 of 95 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Excellent Sony Camcorder, 1 April 2012
    By 
    David Williams (cardiff) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Sony Handycam CX190 Full HD Camcorder – Black (5.3MP, 25x Optical Zoom) 2.7 inch LCD (Electronics)

    Purchased this HD camcorder as I was not happy with the blurry image from my old jvc mini dv cam.
    I looked at loads of reviews and this came up as a decent HD camera for the price, it turned out an
    excellent choice, stunning picture when connected to my 37″ HD tv, IM using the FX setting, which
    is the best quality AVCHD recording mode, this gives about 90 mins of recording time on a 16gb sd card.
    I downloaded the Play Memories software to get the files on computer through the built in usb hub, and
    successfully copied AVCHD files to a standard DVD disc. You can do minor editing on the camera or on play
    memories but Im going to purchase serif software for serious editing, its on offer at the moment for £20.
    Note! The recorded AVCHD disc will not play on a normal DVD player, you have to have a blu ray player
    or playstation 3, I played my recording on my blu ray player with excellent results, even night shots
    with very little light were very good.
    I highly recommend his camcorder.

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  2. 124 of 127 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Brilliant camera but it’s not full HD, 14 Jun 2012
    By 
    Paul Dodd
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Sony Handycam CX190 Full HD Camcorder – Black (5.3MP, 25x Optical Zoom) 2.7 inch LCD (Electronics)

    I’ve had this camera for a month now and i’m very pleased with it. The build quality is excellent as you’d expect from Sony and the camera itself is very small, about the same size as a modern computer mouse. Everything is in exactly the right place and it sits very nicely in your grip when in use, the zoom lever is perfectly placed and there’s an extra groove to fit a finger into.
    It couldn’t be simpler to record with, just one push of the REC button to start and another to stop. Using the video afterwards is not quite so simple but i’ll come onto that later. It has a photo mode so with one push of the MODE button it turns into a digital camera. The photos taken with this are average at best so i wouldn’t want to use it as my only holiday camera but the quality of the photos are just the same as a low-end 2 megapixel phone. It’s a nice feature to have if you only want to carry one camera for everything and aren’t too bothered about having amazing quality. I found a much better way to get photos is simply to record some HD video for 1 second then grab an image of that when you play it back on a PC. There’s no flash though so it’d be no good as a still camera in the dark.

    The video quality is of a very high standard, far above what you find on other cheaper brands that have impressive specs but fall short when you compare them to a qaulity camcorder such as this. It looks as good as any TV broadcast i’ve seen with super sharp colours. The Exmor R sensor means it records brilliantly even in low light conditions such as when shooting indoors. It really does make a difference and that’s just one thing you pay extra for over the cheap cameras that look bad indoors.

    The main point to make with the video is that it is not full HD, no matter what it says on any adverts or even on the box. If you don’t know or care about technical stuff then it won’t matter but there are two kinds of “full” HD. One is 1080i and means the camera records line 1,3,5 etc. And then goes back and records lines 2,4,6 etc. So it only records half the image at any time. 1080P means it records everyline, all the time, giving a slightly better picture (but you’d be hard pushed to tell the difference between i and p even with 2 TV’s next to each other).
    Before 2011 any camera saying “Full HD” was 1080p but this one is only 1080i. I did a lot of research into this before buying and even people who owned the camera and had posted videos on Youtube seem confused as to whether it’s 1080p or 1080i. Look on the official Sony site and it’ll tell you in the specs it’s 1080i. If you open the camera up and put it on full quality it’ll say i and not p on the screen. “Full HD” only means it records 1080 lines of video and not that it’s progressive.

    There are some great features on this camera. I noticed before i bought it that it had a built in USB cable which slots into the strap when not in use. I wondered what the point of this was but it really does come in handy because not only can you transfer files through it but it can be used to charge the camera meaning you can avoid having to carry around yet another AC adaptor with you. Taking out the memory card and plugging it into a PC to transfer the files is not recommended as i’ll come to in a moment.
    Another great feature is the zoom mic. This amplifies the microphone when you zoom in so you effectively zoom in on conversations happening some distance away! It can be great when you’re in a crowd and want to record what the guide at the front it saying or when you want to zoom in on some wildlife and hear as well as see them.

    Speaking of the zoom, it goes up to 30x which is more than enough. It works up to 25x with the optical image stabaliser on and i’d recommend leaving that on. Even when i was on the back of a boat bobbing around in a rough sea it kept the image stable and avoided any annoying blurring. Again, that’s why this camera costs more than some of the very cheap models you may have seen. I’ve zoomed in from the bottom the cliff right up into the window of a castle above and even at full zoom the picture is as good as if you’re filming something right next to you.
    The camera records at 24Mbps at full quality, taking up around 10GB per hour of HD video shot at 1080i. This is one of the downsides of this, and any HD, camcorder. The sheer amount of time and effort it takes to use whatever you film may put some off. It’s easy to just plug the camera in to a TV, or take out the memory card and plug that into an SD slot on a TV, but if you want to edit the footage you’re going to need some technical knowhow. Just plugging the SD card into a PC will result in you only getting video with no sound. You have to run it through a program such as Windows Movie Maker or Sony Vegas and convert the video to make it watchable on a PC. I have a very powperful PC with a 6 core processor, 8GB of RAM, Windows 7 64-bit and even with all that it takes…

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  3. 23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Fantastic value for money, 17 May 2012
    By 

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What is this?)
    This review is from: Sony Handycam CX190 Full HD Camcorder – Black (5.3MP, 25x Optical Zoom) 2.7 inch LCD (Electronics)

    I previously owned an old Dv tape VCR & needed to upgrade.

    I tested several HD camcorders & found this one to have a silky smooth focus, which did not hunt to focus on the subject at its full focal length, which was apparent with sevearl others in the same price range.
    It is extremely lightweight & although not the robust around it should stand the test of time short of throwing it around.

    The quality of the recording is awesome & looked amazing when viewed on a 50″ TV. As an added bonus the 5.3 MP stills are suprisingly good.

    I would heartily recommend this to anyone looking to upgrade to full HD as it is so small, lightweight & produces images of the highest quality

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