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Introduction
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01.Product Tour
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02.Colour & Noise Performance
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03.Motion & Sharpness Performance
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04.Low Light Performance
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05.Compression & Media
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06.Manual Controls
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07.Still Features
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08.Handling & Use
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09.Playback & Connectivity
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10.Audio & Other Features
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11.Canon HF S100 Comparison
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12.Panasonic HDC-HS300 Comparison
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13.Sony HDR-XR520 Comparison
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14.Conclusion
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15.Photo Gallery
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16.Specs and Ratings
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17.Comments
Canon LEGRIA HV40
Previous: Part 6
Manual ControlsNext: Part 8
Handling & Use
Still Features Summary
• Limited still image capabilities (max resolution of 2048 x 1536).
• Photos can be captured in Tape Mode (even while recording), but more options are available in Card Mode.
• Photos are saved to MiniSD memory cards.
• The camcorder has a built-in flash, a self timer, and a few photo size options.
• Still image performance was better than expected, considering the camcorder's photo specs aren't that impressive.
Still Features (9.82)
The Canon HV40 has your basic still features even though its still image capabilities aren't that impressive. The camcorder can take photos at a maximum resolution of 2048 x 1536, which isn't that large when you consider many new camcorders offer a 4000 x 3000 photo option. To access most of the HV40's still image controls you have to switch the camcorder over to card mode. Photos can be captured in video mode (even while recording), but only at 1920 x 1080 or 848 x 480 resolutions.
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| The built in flash has a number of settings. | Switching to Card Mode gives you more still image options. |
In card mode you have access to all the manual controls that are available in video mode (like shutter speed and aperture control), but you also can set the metering mode to evaluative, centre-weighted average, or spot. There are two continuous shooting settings for photos: Normal takes 3 images per second, while High-Speed goes at roughly 5 images per second (when using the flash consecutive shooting runs at roughly 2.1 images per second). Both modes will continue to capture photos as long as you hold down the shutter button or reach the limit of 60 consecutive shots. There's also an auto exposure bracketing option that takes three images, each of which has a different exposure setting (-1/2 EV, normal, +1/2 EV).
| Still Feature Specifications | |
| Resolution | 2048 x 1536 (L) 1920 x 1080 (LW) 1440 x 1080 (M) 640 x 480 (S) 848 x 480 (video mode only) |
| Quality | Super Fine, Fine, Normal |
| ISO | None |
| Flash | Auto, Red-Eye Reduction, On, Off |
The HV40 has a built in flash that is located to the left of the lens. The flash has a red-eye reduction setting and it can be turned on and off using the joystick navigation control. Additional photo controls include three quality options (Super Fine, Fine, and Normal), a 10-second self-timer, the ability to capture photos during playback (in the resolution the video was shot), and a playback zoom feature.
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| The Function Menu in Card Mode | The Main Menu in Card Mode |
Still Colour (7.94)
The Canon HV40 actually produced more vivid colours in its still photos (a 116.7% saturation level) than in our bright light video testing. The colour accuracy, which was 4.41 in our still testing, was roughly the same as our video test. This isn't a bad performance, but it isn't anything of note. Many camcorders have much more accurate colours in our still testing (the Panasonic HDC-HS300 and the Sony HDR-XR520, for example). (More on how we test still colour.)
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| The still photography colour error map: the length and direction of each line indicates how the camcorder processed each particular colour. |
The colour error map above shows that the HV40 had specific trouble with blue tones (notice how long the lines are for the three blue colours near the bottom). The camcorder did not show this much error with blues in our video testing, and in the sample image below you can see that the blue colours appear a bit bright and almost neon in their tone. In fact, the HV40 produced a very bright image overall in our still colour test. We saw similar things from the HF S100, which also had some slight overexposure.
| Canon HV40 Still Colour Comparisons | |
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| Canon HV40 | Canon HF S100 |
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| Panasonic HDC-HS300 | Sony HDR-XR520 |
Still Noise (3.34)
The HV40's noise level in our still testing was 0.94%. This is a bit higher than we'd like to see, especially since it is close to double the noise percentage we measured in our bright light video testing. This noise level is close to average for an HD camcorder, however, and it is actually less than the Canon HF S100 measured. The Panasonic HDC-HS300 had the lowest still noise levels of this group, registering just 0.79% noise. (More on how we test still noise.)
Still Sharpness (5.81)
The Canon HV40 only has an effective pixel count of 2.76 megapixels for its still images and it can capture photos at a maximum resolution of 2048 x 1536. This is much smaller than many camcorders are capable of, but that didn't stop the HV40 from putting up halfway decent numbers in our still sharpness test. The camcorder measured a horizontal sharpness of 1313 lw/ph with 5.2% oversharpening, and a vertical sharpness of 1694 lw/ph with 6.2% oversharpening. These are good scores for a camcorder that doesn't have a high megapixel capability—in fact, it is actually better than the Panasonic HDC-HS300 was capable of. It also wasn't much worse than the 6-megapixel Sony HDR-XR520. (More on how we test still sharpness.)
There are lots of better camcorders out there for capturing still photos, however. The Canon HF S series (HF S100, HF S10, HF S11) all can capture 8-megapixel photos, the JVC GZ-X900 and GZ-HM400 can take 9-megapixel photos, and the Sanyo VPC-HD2000 and VPC-CG10 can also take 9-megapixel photos. The HV40's numbers are also no match for even a cheap, dedicated digital camera—many of which have 12-megapixel still image capability or higher.
| Canon HV40 Comparisons | ||
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| Canon HF S100 | Panasonic HDC-HS300 | Sony HDR-XR520 |
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