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JVC GZ-MG50EK - Digital Camcorder

Author James Morris
Published 4th Jan 2006
Manufacturer JVC
Supplier Pixmania
Price £412.77 (Exc VAT)
as reviewed £485.00 (Inc VAT)
Latest Price Click here
Features Score 9 for Features
Image Quality Score 9 for Image Quality
Value Score 8 for Value
Overall Score 9 for Overall
JVC GZ-MG50EK - Digital Camcorder
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The MG50 also offers the usual range of controls you’d expect for a sub-£500 consumer camcorder. It’s obviously not meant for hobbyists, as no accessory shoe is provided for adding a video light or microphone. There’s no input for the latter, either, and no headphone jack for keeping track of levels. However, you can manually adjust focus, set shutter speeds from 1/15th to 1/4000th of a second, and exposure from -6 to +6. Aside from auto mode, you can also choose between halogen, cloud and fine white balance presets, or manually set this yourself. Four auto-exposure modes and four digital effects are also provided.

One problem with new camcorder formats such as the Everio has been editing the footage. However, now that the range has been around for about a year, most mainstream software has added direct support. Premiere Elements 2 can import video straight from an Everio camcorder over a USB 2.0 connection, and the latest version 10 of Pinnacle Studio supports the file format too. Although the Everio records MPEG-2 video, the audio is in Dolby Digital AC-3 stereo, and the files have a MOD extension rather than MPG. So not all software will recognise the files without specific support, even if it can edit MPEG-2.



The frame-based compression used by DV is generally considered to afford better video quality than MPEG. But we didn’t notice any particular artefacts in the video we shot at the Everio’s best quality setting. In fact, we’d go so far as to say that the compression format has little noticeable effect on image quality at all.

However, the MG50 is a fairly average camcorder. It only has one CCD, although it is a relatively large one. Under good lighting, the image quality was good, with faithful colour reproduction and adequate contrast. When we moved indoors, the results remained commendable with good artificial lighting, but a certain amount of grain appeared when illumination was poor. Still, this is one area where the cheaper MG20 and MG30 really fall down. Considering that you’re quite likely to shoot in poor indoor lighting if you use your camcorder for capturing family moments, performance under these conditions is crucial. Fortunately, here the MG50’s larger CCD and F1.2 lens really prove their worth. Its abilities are in a different league to the MG20 and MG30, if not up with a three-CCD camcorder such as the Everio GZ-MC500.

Digital photography is another area where JVC’s premium Everio GZ-MC500 excels. However, with just a 1.33 megapixel CCD the MG50 can only manage digital stills at up to 1,152 x 864. The results will be good enough for your web page, but not for printing, so you’ll still have to stick a digital camera in your luggage when you head off on holiday.

Verdict

The JVC GZ-MG50EK won’t appeal to enthusiasts. Instead, for those with more serious videomaking itentions we’d recommend Sony’s amazing HDR-HC1E. But for a general-purpose holiday camcorder, the JVC has a lot to commend it. With so much storage available, all you need to worry about is keeping it supplied with battery power.

Although there are cheaper Everios on the market, their failure in low light make them a false economy. And although the GZ-MC500 excels in this area, it will be far too expensive for most people, and its 4GB hard disk only stores an hour of video. If you fancy the idea of leaving the bag full of tapes behind, the MG50 shows the worth of hard disk technology in camcorders. Its video image quality is good, and at under £500 it gets the balance just right.

 

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