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RobLambert  
#1 Posted : Saturday, November 23, 2019 4:27:27 AM(UTC)
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I am about to take the plunge and buy four NDI cameras for my studio.

Several years ago I heard Dr. Cross from Newtek say that NDI-HX delivered the same quality of image as regular old FULL NDI except for two things:
1. NDI-HX used less bandwidth 20MB vs 140MB
2. the NDI-HX has more latency due to encoding long chains of data....this higher latency being the cost of keeping the image the same quality of FULL NDI.

All in all, he strongly implied that the images were identical.

Now that I am shopping for Cameras I see that some companies make a big deal that their signals and converters are FULL NDI. Other companies like PTZ Optics make a big deal that the images are pristine with NDI-HX

So here is my question.

For a small studio (4 cameras) with plenty of bandwidth (10GB dedicated ethernet) is there an advantage in going with "FULL NDI?"

If all of the cameras are NDI-HX the latency will be consistently higher, but, isn't that not a big deal if they are all the same latency?

Please help me with advice. I am ready to purchase these cameras now; but, can't seem to find a straight answer on this.

Thank you very much,

Rob
mavik  
#2 Posted : Tuesday, November 26, 2019 10:26:01 PM(UTC)
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Cameras with full NDI output are unknown to me.
I would only go full NDI for the standard setup. If you wanna have a mobile wifi connected cam then you wanna go NDI|HX.
I would buy good cams and use converters to get them in via NDI.
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RobLambert on 12/4/2019(UTC)
mjgraves  
#3 Posted : Monday, December 2, 2019 12:56:07 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: mavik Go to Quoted Post
Cameras with full NDI output are unknown to me.
I would only go full NDI for the standard setup. If you wanna have a mobile wifi connected cam then you wanna go NDI|HX.
I would buy good cams and use converters to get them in via NDI.


Agreed. Only the Birddog cameras have full NDI built-in. I've used the P200. It's a very good camera for the $.

BirdDog encoders are similarly full NDI, so you can make any camera full NDI-capable.

It's also worth noting that Kiloview encoders allow you to vary the bit rate of NDI|HX. This might be useful, although I've not had any opportunity to perform a hands-on evaluation.

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RobLambert on 12/29/2019(UTC)
mjgraves  
#4 Posted : Monday, December 2, 2019 12:59:24 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: RobLambert Go to Quoted Post
If all of the cameras are NDI-HX the latency will be consistently higher, but, isn't that not a big deal if they are all the same latency?


#1 - vMix does allow you to induce delay so you can match sources with different latency. It does present a load to the CPU.

#2 - Most people concerned about latency are dealing with local projection, aka IMAG. In that case, it's a serious problem that the images on the projector are delayed vs the live event on stage.
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RobLambert on 12/4/2019(UTC)
RobLambert  
#5 Posted : Wednesday, December 4, 2019 12:56:02 PM(UTC)
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Guys, this helps me a lot. Thank you.

I am going to just use NDI/HX and be happy.

The following recommendation raises one issue I have been thinking about which is related, I think.

You wrote:

Originally Posted by: mavik Go to Quoted Post

I would buy good cams and use converters to get them in via NDI.


This forum and the Vmix site has plenty of good relevant and up to date info on Converters. So, that is easy to make a decision.

The issue I am unsure of is how fancy does a High Definition Camera with a good lens need to be to give a stellar HD image. How good is good for a camera to allow clear wonderful jucy and marvelous HD images in an open well lit studio environment. Sound doesn't matter, just the image transmitted to the Vmix computer needs to be good.

I am tempted to buy an expensive complex professional several thousand dollar cam corder like the folks at Vmix use in their fun time live show because they are rumored to be "the best" for independent television....

But, doesn't NDI/HD look the same everything else being equal whether or not the shooting camera is a 4000 dollar fancy cam corder or a nice PTZ Optics type HD NDI camera or a plain old 500 dollar camcorder with a good converter.....

... in other words, won't a solid well lit image from a 500 dollar or so solid HD speced camera converted to NDI/HX look the same or is the thousands extra for the fancier cameras noticeable. Ir it is obvious, then I buy the fancy cameras. I think I need to say that all cameras will be in a fixed location and PT is not necessary, just focus and zoom now and then.



I hope this makes sense and I appreciate you all. I honestly don't want to waste thousands on cameras which aren't going to be apparent in the product.... but, if they are then I will spend. Thank you all for the well studied advice.... It takes a lot of experience to just know this stuff.

Rob
mavik  
#6 Posted : Tuesday, December 10, 2019 8:25:24 PM(UTC)
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Take the following into consideration.
SDI vs HDMI
4K vs FHD

SDI: longer cable runs possible compared to HDMI. A locked connector.
HDMI: You want to check that you get a clean HDMI output from the camera. Sometimes OSD content is displayed and can't be switched off
4K: With a single 4K signal you can cut out a 1K shot and make a single cam look like multicam.

Some cams might be runnung on PoE which simplifies the setup.

A Panasonic GH5 is a good option in my opinion. You can use it for other stuff as well. You can change the lense and get a very good 4K full size HDMI output.
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RobLambert on 12/29/2019(UTC)
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