Thursday, September 8, 2011

Panasonic HX-WA10 review


Panasonic HX-WA10

Panasonic appears to be covering all bases. The company has a camcorder in pretty much each plot and type, with the Panasonic HX-WA10 spearheading its upright options . Panasonic HX-WA10 the water-resistant member of the range, with non-water-resistant options also unfilled. But it has a few additional surprises in store as well.
Panasonic HX-WA10
This is very much a plot that sits in between the pocket Internet camcorder and conventional ‘Handycam’ style models. So it has facial appearance somewhere in between as well. Panasonic HX-WA10 calls this a Dual Camera, because Panasonic HX-WA10 also aimed at shooting still images reasonably well. As such, the Panasonic HX-WA10 comes equipped with a sizeable 1/2.3in CMOS, with an effective 11Mpixels whether capturing record or stills. The sensor also facial appearance back-side explanation equipment, where the wiring is located behind the CMOS pixels rather than in front of them, allowing a greater amount of set alight in, thereby boosting sensitivity. We’ve universally been impressed with the benefits of this equipment, so it’s very salutation here.

Some pocket Internet camcorders, such as Kodak’s PLAYSPORT Zx3, have also sized sensors. But one map none of them has is an optical zoom, and Panasonic HX-WA10 offers a modest but still helpful 5x factor. Panasonic also takes subsidy of the superfluous pixels on the sensor to grant a 12x advanced zoom. This crops into the CMOS frame rather than blowing the image up, so in scheme preserves resolution, although you’re still shooting with a cut-rate area, so set alight sensitivity will be affected. Even if, the 60i and 60p modes can only subsidy from 6x Advanced Zoom, and you can’t use it all when shooting record.
Panasonic HX-WA10

Panasonic HX-WA10

With Panasonic HX-WA10 upright plot, the Panasonic HX-WA10 is proposed to be held a bit like a gun. Even if, you don’t run it by your index fiddle with. Instead, the primary functions are accessed by your thumb and an array of buttons on the back behind the lens. Here, you can trigger record recording and take a depiction. In between these buttons is a zoom rocker, and beneath a pin for toggling the Gifted Auto mode. The end detects shooting circumstances and attempts to set scene modes accordingly, for example enabling Low Set alight in poor explanation, and Likeness when it picks up a face. Yes, there’s face detection on hand here, too, which will set focus and exposure according to any human face found in the frame. There’s image stabilisation, too, although only of the electronic diversity.

Panasonic HX-WA10

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