Russ, if you remember, a while back I bought (on a whim) a dated (2007) but like-new Sony HVR V1U. You warned me about the 'annoyance' of dealing with tape (digital) as a recording media but I wouldn't listen
. I soon learned that you were right. Although I'd used tape in the past, I guess I forgot what a PITA it was to work with. I had to retrofit my editing computer with a firewire interface (for starters). Luckily, you can find ANYthing on the internet
. It soon went on the 'I'll try it later' shelf where it resided until I became aware of....wait for it....ATOMOS. In case you're not familiar with it, it's an HDMI digital recorder that fits onto the camera (optional-it doesn't really care where the HDMI signal comes from). I found a like-new Ninja 2 (Model #) for $190 on ebay, bought it, hooked it up, and it worked like a charm. Recording media is a 2.5 in. HD or SSD (no size limit) which fits into a little housing that slips right into the recorder. It pops out and connects to a USB 3.0 port for file transfer into the computer. I went down to the lake a couple of blocks from my house, and took about 2 hours worth of video (1080p/24 frame). Beautiful video. It records in .mov format which wouldn't work in my Power Directer until I loaded Apple's Quicktime. Apparently Quicktime provides some Codec that's needed for .mov files. Oh well, this is getting boring but I like the fact of bringing 'old' equipment into the 21st century. Man, that old stuff is SOOOO well built. Talk to you later.
chas