- CNET
- Camcorders
- Sony DCR-DVD755
Sony DCR-DVD755
There are better choices than the Sony Handycam DCR-DVD755, a so-so DVD camcorder.
| The good | Generally fast autofocus and autoexposure; can finalize discs while on battery power. |
|---|---|
| The bad | Middling video quality; no windscreen filter for microphone; small LCD with impractical touch screen-based menu system. |
CNET Editors' Rating
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CNET Editors' rating
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Rating breakdown
Sony does include some features that the others lack, such as an analog input (for creating DVDs of analog videos), an active accessory shoe for an add-on video light or the bundled surround-sound microphone, Memory Stick Duo Pro support for storing still photos, and built-in Dolby 5.1 surround recording. The last couple of options are pretty much wasted here, though.
As you'd guess, the DVD755's photos are low quality. And surround sound is a poor fit for a budget camcorder. Sony might have been better advised to relocate the ill-positioned built-in stereo mic from the front of the camcorder to the top, as well as add some sort of wind filter. In my videos, the sound of the admittedly strong summer breeze occasionally overwhelmed the sound of whatever I was recording.
Normally, sensor resolution becomes an critical issue only if you plan to take still photos with the camcorder. But DVD- and hard drive-based models, which compress the video on the fly, tend to need more headroom on the resolution to deliver decent MPEG-2 encoding quality.
Needless to say, the DVD755's 690,000-effective-pixel video looks pretty mediocre--it's soft, with purple fringing, severely blown out highlights, and the occasional motion hiccup. That's for video shot outdoors, in the type of diffuse afternoon light photographers like best. Indoors, the video also becomes visually noisy--even with adequate illumination--and severe edge crawl sets in.
It does better on exposure and white balance, but you have to hit the Backlight button to compensate for backlit subjects; these days, most cameras and camcorders are intelligent enough to recognize and adjust for it automatically. And though it was fairly speedy, the autofocus system had an occasional but annoying propensity to lock on anything but the subject.
On the subject of annoyances, there's the 2.7-inch touch-screen LCD, which is too small for negotiating the menus; the plastic DVD drive cover, which always feels loose; and the weak battery, which seems to last between 20 and 30 minutes. The DVD755 allows you to finalize discs while on battery power, but given its short life, you probably should save that for video emergencies.
Unless this model has some unique, crucial feature that you can't live without--and I can't imagine what that might be--you're better off with almost any other more highly rated model than the Handycam DCR-DVD755.
Latest comments
Pros: None
Cons: Very complicated software, Does not work well with Vista or Windows 7
Summary: Difficult to use and poor picture quality
Bouht a new DVD755 to go with my new Sony VIOI. Surprisingly the Sony DVD755 would not work with Vista. Sony website had no plans to upgrade the XP software. The dealers were unsympathetic saying the boxes state the operating system. This is true but you do not expect the Canon dealer to sell two products that will not work together. Beware if you lose the original disk because it is impossible to upload updates or new/alternative Sony software. Once the software was loaded on an alternative PC with XP I found it difficult to use and of poor quality. The film quality hardly compares to the video on my Canon IXUS which is simple to download and edit. A poor buy which has lowered my opinion of Sony. Not recommended
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