Colorimetric and Resolution Settings For The: Sony-HVR A1/HC1
Colorimetric and Resolution Settings For The: Sony-HVR A1/HC1
Colorimetric and Resolution Settings For The: Sony-HVR A1/HC1
Sony-HVR A1/HC1
Alan Roberts
Data for this is taken from a long examination of a production model of the Sony HDV camcorder, HVR-
A1E, and comparison with a HVR-HC1E. This is a HDTV camcorder, physically very similar to the
standard-definition PDX10, with a single 1”/3 cmos sensor (5.9mm diagonal). It records in HDV (1080i/25,
50Hz interlaced) format onto miniDV tapes, and standard definition (576i/25) as either miniDV or DVCAM.
The camera is essentially a consumer model; the A1 has some pretensions to professional capture, such as
having a removable sound pod which will accept sound via XLR connectors at mic or line level, and slightly
different features from its companion, the HC1. Both have an integral lens (Zeiss, 5.1~51mm) and
viewfinder, with side lcd panel, and seem aimed at the high-end consumer market rather than broadcast or
professional, which would normally demand interchangeable lenses. The HC1 is the simpler camera, and
incorporates a flash for stills photography.
The cameras have many internal menus for setting the performance and very few external controls, although
enough to control most of the important features. There are analogue-only video outputs (components at HD
and SD, composite and S-video at SD, all via multi-pin connectors) and digits via IEEE1394 Firewire
(known as “i.Link” by Sony) and USB.
Measurements were made only on an A1. The normal assessment procedure for cameras could not be used,
largely because the A1 does not have a selectable test signal. Therefore, testing had to be done the hard way,
via the lens. Recommended settings allowing for a “video-look” and a “film-look” have been derived,
although there are some serious compromises that have to be taken into account.
It is useful to think of the camera, when used with “film-look”, to be mimicking a film camera and telecine,
with “best light” transfer to tape. Measurement results are given after the settings tables, in order to explain
the decisions. At best, the camera can deliver about 10 stops of exposure range, similar to other HD
cameras, but it is easy to set the camera such that exposure range drops to 7 stops or less. In the target
market for this camera, a grading operation may well not be used in post-production, so the settings should
be used with care.
While HDV performance is just about acceptable, there are significant problems with its performance as an
SD camera for professional or broadcast purposes. Performance, with the recommended settings, is probably
adequate for consumer use. The reasons for this statement are given in the measurements section (2.2.4 and
2.2.5) of this document.
The controls for these cameras are not as flexible as for full “broadcast” cameras, so more effort was
expended in measuring performance than in trying to derive a specific “look” for it. The menus are all
activated via the touch-sensitive lcd panel, there are very few external physical controls. Iris control
conjoins gain (to +18dB maximum), iris (F/1.8 to F/4), neutral filter (clear to 1/8), and iris again (F/4 to
F/11). Very small apertures (less than F/4) soften the picture and produce visible colour-fringing due to
diffraction effects in the iris. If external neutral density filters are not available when shooting in very bright
light, then the shutter is the better alternative to using apertures physically smaller than F/4.
Many of the menu items have little or no effect on image quality. Those that have significant effect are
highlighted. The full set of menu items is given for completeness. In boxes with a range of numeric settings,
the values indicate the range, and no scales are given. The numbers represent the count of bars in the
thermometer presentation from the left, usually 1 to 16 with 8 being the central (default) value (the HC1
often has 1 to 8 with 4 being the central, default value). Default settings are underlined. My
recommendations are in the last column, labelled “use”, where appropriate. Settings are given for:
h HDV recording
s SDTV recording, miniDV or DVCAM (although I do not recommend shooting SD, see measurements
section below)
v Television production
f Film-look television
In the tables, items that have an important effect on picture appearance are highlighted with grey
background. Items are marked A or H to show which camera they exist in (A1/HC1). The mode column
indicates whether each menu item is available in Camera Tape (c), Camera Memory (m), or Play/Edit (p)
power-switch settings. Rather than just making assertions about performance, I have included measurement
results that illustrate the reasons for recommending settings.
Note that, in each power-switch mode, the menus can be separately customised, adding or removing any
menu item from the entire set of menus.
This is not intended as a replacement for reading the manual.
1 Menu settings
2
set Level AH c-- High, Normal, Low Control of flash, also flash level
Super NS AH c-- On, Off IR nightshooting, only when switch is On
NS light AH cm- On, Off IR lamp under lens
Color slow AH c-- On, Off Lowers frame rate, only on Auto exposure
Zebra AH cm- Off, 70, 100 Zebra exposure level, cancels if Peaking is set
Histogram AH cm- On, Off Brightness histogram
Self-timer AH cm- On, Off 10-second delayed record start
Digital zoom AH c-- Off, 20x, 40x Lens is 10x, max is 120x in HC1 Off
Steadyshot AH c-- On, Off Electronic image stabiliser, zooms in slightly
Conv.lens AH c-- Off, Wide, Tele Tailors Steadyshot to conversion lenses
Full scan A c-- On, Off When Off, Steadyshot doesn’t change zoom
Exposure lever A cm- Exposure, AE shift Assign Exposure lever
3
STANDARD SET menu General VTR matters
item cam mode range comments use
VCR HDV/DV AH --p Auto, HDV, DV Playback mode, Auto does not work with Edius
HDV
Rec format AH c-p HDV1080i, DV Camera and recording mode
1080i
Rec mode A c-p DVCAM, DV SP SD mode, only when Format is DV
Rec mode H c-p SP, LP SD mode, only when Format is DV
DV set
AU.ch2 level A c-- Auto, Manual Channel 2 (Right) level, manual control is here
set
4
Off =normal (slow uptake), On=crash start
Quick rec (HDV) A c-- On, Off Off
(wrecks Avid)
No assign, Status check,
Steadyshot, One push
Assign button A cmp Assign something to the Assign button
WB, Histogram, Color
bar
A.shut off H cmp 5min, Never Auto shut off
English
Russian, Arabic, Persian This is really dangerous, how do you get back
English, Simplified if you set it to something silly?
English, Latin American
“P” variants AH cmp Spanish, Traditional
Chinese, Simplified
Chinese or Thai
2 Measurements
In order to explore the gamma-correction curve (and thus to establish the exposure range over which the
camera works) and resolution, tests had to be done via the lens, since there is no internal test signal. All
measurements were made on frames extracted from recordings, either HDV or DV as appropriate, thus they
deal with pictures as they are available to the normal user, and not to a user who takes the camera output to
some other recording format.
V = (1 + 0.089)L0.485 - 0.089
0.8
0.7
Compressed 4:1 for V>0.88
0.6
Black Stretch: (A1)
V = 4.5 L for L<0.018, else 0.5
V = (1 + 0.071)L - 0.071
0. 58
0.08
Compressed 4:1 for V>0.83
0.06
Clearly, Cinetone2 has substantial “Black Press”
and is intended to mimic low-contrast film, as 0.04
projected, while Cinetone1 does a reasonable job
of mimicking negative film in the same way that 0.02
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the gamma-corrector output produces 1% or 2% video signal, and express contrast range as the peak
exposure (250% in this case) divided by this value. For the four found curves, this results in:
Exp 1% Ratio Stops Exp 2% Ratio Stops
Normal 0.0029 862:1 9.75 0.0055 454:1 8.85
Black Stretch 0.0021 1190:1 10.25 0.0045 555:1 9.15
Cinetone1 0.0030 833:1 9.7 0.0061 410:1 8.68
Cinetone2 0.0055 454:1 8.85 0.0109 230:1 7.85
Using the Black Stretch setting, colour rendition is quite good; in the chromaticity diagram (Fig.4) of
Macbeth chart colours (tungsten illumination), each colour is
shown at it’s specified, rebalanced, chromaticity, and a cross
shows where the camera places it. Normal setting is
satisfactory for consumer use, but not for professional or
broadcast HDTV capture.
Data-extraction is non-trivial; specialised software was used to establish the frequency response, plus a
considerable degree of interpretation was needed to make sense of the results, which must not be taken as
100% reliable, they are intended only to illustrate what is going on, and not as a set of exact measurements.
Nevertheless, sufficient data could be extracted to produce a reliable analysis of the camera’s performance.
Since the Sharpness filter acts on the full 1920 structure, it tends
to emphasise the aliases above 1440 l/pw as well as the wanted
frequencies below that. I recommend not using excessive
amounts of Sharpness, to avoid this. Conventionally, the
Sharpness control might be used to maximally flatten the
frequency response, a setting of 2 or 3 would do that, but is not
the ideal solution. For that, it is better to look at edges,
fortunately, the Zone Plate test card has a black/white transition Figure 8, 1080i edges
that is suitable (Fig.8). Clearly a setting of 8 (middle) causes
a slight overshoot in the transition from grey to white and
black to grey, but not the other way. A setting of 7 appears to
be about right for images to be captured sharply but without
the trade-mark outline ringing so common in SD video
production.
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aliased (unwanted) frequency content.
The Sharpness control appears to produce a boost centred on about 270 l/ph (1080/4). The shape of the
boosting appears to match a filter with coefficients of -¼, 0, ½, 0, -¼, i.e. the same filter as is used
horizontally, but used in the lines of the field rather than the frame, as would be expected in an interlaced
camera.
Again, a Sharpness setting of 7 produces acceptable pictures, higher settings show ringing on edges and
produce disturbing inter-line twitter on interlaced displays.
pictures either in conventional mini-DV or in DVCAM formats. For this, the camera must perform a down
conversion. Ideally, this would be done in the filter used for extraction of RGB signals from the Bayer
pattern, but…..
The response (Fig.11) shows a null at 720 l/pw as expected, and one at 1440 as well. So it is evident that the
down-conversion has been done on the HD signal, and not directly from the sensor. This is disappointing,
since the down-conversion has not suppressed the higher
frequencies. It is also apparent that the down-conversion filter
itself is a relatively simple one, because it inherently boosts
frequencies at around 360 l/pw. Thus, the Sharpness control’s
effect has been enhanced by the down-conversion process. It is
also obvious that the Sharpness filter has the same form as for
vertical HD, i.e. -¼, 0, ½, 0, -¼.
As a result, very little extra Sharpness is needed, perhaps none at
all, but as for HDV operation, it is a good idea to look at edges
rather than frequency responses (Fig.12). There is no setting of
Sharpness that does not produce an overshoot, but setting 4 is a
reasonable compromise. Certainly, the default setting of 8
produces significant overshoots, which may be acceptable for
consumer production, but in a semi-professional camera it should Figure 12, 576i edges
be possible to minimise this sort of effect, it is a shame that it
cannot be eliminated completely.
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