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PXW-X70 users will want a Shogun or PIX-E5 even more after the 4K upgrade

PXW-X70 users will want a Shogun or PIX-E5 even more after the 4K upgrade 4

I know several happy users of the Sony PXW-X70 1080p 4:2:2/10-bit camcorder, with its promising 4K Ultra HD future. Those who edit with Final Cut Pro X already had two lingering reasons to consider purchasing a recorder/monitor, be it a Shogun from Átomos, PIX-E5 from VideoDevices, or even an Odyssey7Q from Convergent Design. At NAB 2015, Sony unveiled the price and specs of the US$500 upgrade to 4K UltraHD for this camcorder scheduled for June 2015. After hearing the specs of the upgrade, many of those same PXW-X70 users now have a third reason to purchase one of the mentioned monitor/recorders: They will resolve the two existing issues, plus a deficiency in the 4K upgrade itself (as explained by Sony at NAB). That deficiency fortunately only affects internal recordings in the camera, not the live external output that would be used to record externally. Details ahead.

I know several happy users of the Sony PXW-X70 1080p 4:2:2/10-bit camcorder, with its promising 4K Ultra HD future. Those who edit with Final Cut Pro X already had two lingering reasons to consider purchasing a recorder/monitor, be it a Shogun from Átomos, PIX-E5 from VideoDevices, or even an Odyssey7Q from Convergent Design. At NAB 2015, Sony unveiled the price and specs of the US$500 upgrade to 4K UltraHD for this camcorder scheduled for June 2015. After hearing the specs of the upgrade, many of those same PXW-X70 users now have a third reason to purchase one of the mentioned monitor/recorders: They will resolve the two existing issues, plus a deficiency in the 4K upgrade itself (as explained by Sony at NAB). That deficiency fortunately only affects internal recordings in the camera, not the live external output that would be used to record externally.

Things to love about the PXW-X70 so far

What is not to love about the current version of the PWX-X70

See my Video framerates and the Tower of Babel: a translation guide from June 2014 for more details.

What Sony has announced for its paid firmware upgrade

According to Sony representatives at NAB 2015, in June Sony will offer PXW-X70 firmware v2.0 and its paid CBKZ-X70FX. Here are the promised benefits:

And here come the disappointing details from Sony about the CBKZ-X70FX 4K UltraHD update.

After the upgrade, inside the camera, you’ll be able to record 4K Ultra HD using the professional XAVC Long GOP, but unlike the 4:2:2 10-bit that the camera can already do at 1080p, with UltraHD, you’ll unfortunately be limited to 4:2:0 and 8-bit. That’s because the maximum payload will be 60 Mb per second (only 10 Mb per second more than what the camera can do in 1080p).

Sony says that it is: “exploring support of a higher bit-rate recording mode than 60 Mbps for 3840×2160 XAVC-L in the future.”

 

This is quite interesting when we see that Sony’s latest consumer 4K UltraHD camcorder model FDR-AX33/B (shown above) costs under US$1000 and can already record 100 megabit per second. Of course, the FDR-AX33/B does not have a 1-inch type sensor, balanced XLR audio, nor does it use the professional XAVC Long GOP códec. Instead, the FDR-AX33/B camcorder has a 1/2.3″ sensor and uses the same consumer XAVC-S códec used in the A7s, although at up to 100 megabit per second. The point that I am making is: If the data bandwidth capability of a consumer sub US$1000 Sony camcorder is already up to 100 megabit per second, why can’t the professional PXW-X70 which costs at least US$2500 after a user pays US$500 for the upgrade to make it capable of UltraHD reach 100 megabit per second too? Something is wrong with this picture, and it will likely entice many to purchase one of the external recorder/monitors mentioned earlier. In fact, if Sony doesn’t yet want to make the internal recording of the PXW-X70 go beyond 60 megabit per second, perhaps Sony should offer a lower-priced UltraHD upgrade for those who want 4K UltraHD for external use only.

Recap of the three issues resolved by the Shogun, PIX-E5, or Odyssey7Q monitor recorders

 

 

 

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