I was once considering getting a DSLR digital still camera to use for video as well. However, the manuals for a couple of them that I researched said that the camera will deliberately limit the time you can continously shoot video before it shuts down to prevent overheating. (Since the camera is not primarily designed for video.) If I remember right, I think the time was fairly short, like maybe 10-15 mins or so. Do all or most DSLR cameras do this with video? Are there any that can handle shooting video without that restriction? (Limited only by memory space, battery life, etc.)
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 8 of 8
-
-
Overheating is not the issue anymore if it ever really was. In the EU, any camera that could record video 30 minutes or more are considered video cameras and subject to a higher import duty than still cameras.
Here's a fairly up op date list of current capabilities:
https://www.recordinglimits.com/ -
What would you shoot for more than 30 minutes unattended? A sports game? A theater play? Other cameras may be more applicable for these tasks.
My US-sold DSLR has 30-minute record limit, so not just EU. I guess it is the same model sold worldwide, so they did not make changes for the US. -
The issue I'm concerned about is the disclaimers on these which say the camera may shut down (even earlier than the limit) due to overheating. So IF after shooting for that time (or less) you'd have to let the camera cool off (by keeping it turned off) before you could shoot again, that would be a problem. But IF it simply limits one continous file to 30 min, but can always keep going right afterwards by manually starting another recording, that may be OK. -
You need to read reviews about specific cameras in specific (read: hot) conditions. Some cameras heat up quickly, other less so. Some cameras have an override setting to keep shooting despite overheating.
-
1. use external recorder or
2. use a camcorder
3. use mirrorless camera
people love them because of the "look" but camcorders can give the same look with tuning and post production.
some use DSLR for film making but renting an actual cinema camera or buying an old 16mm film camera might be a better option. -
-
Last edited by smrpix; 12th Oct 2023 at 10:11.
Similar Threads
-
CCD video cameras
By rrats in forum Camcorders (DV/HDV/AVCHD/HD)Replies: 3Last Post: 27th Jun 2023, 13:40 -
Editor that is easy to mix from multiple cameras and digital zoom closeup
By larioso in forum EditingReplies: 0Last Post: 14th Nov 2022, 04:57 -
Which are better cameras ? The enormous sized TV cameras or movie cameras?
By Truthler in forum Camcorders (DV/HDV/AVCHD/HD)Replies: 10Last Post: 28th Sep 2021, 07:55 -
IP video from PTZOptics cameras - RTSP/RTMP vs NDI
By shawn_n in forum Video Streaming DownloadingReplies: 2Last Post: 20th Nov 2020, 07:20 -
Video mic/DSLR audio problem
By videok in forum AudioReplies: 0Last Post: 2nd Aug 2019, 06:55