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<blockquote data-quote="suprPHREAK" data-source="post: 40493" data-attributes="member: 1505"><p>You are mostly right. There is still the idea that big eauals professional.</p><p></p><p>I used to shoot wedding videos. It was at a time when digital video was just starting to get hold, and so people were transitioning to DV cameras. Prior to that was analog video cameras, usually SVHS. It doesnt take an expert to see the difference in quality from analog to digital. As a result, my first digital camera to do work with was a small MiniDV Handycam. Sony used to still put manual controls on their consumer products so I could still get a very good picture, better than my VHS by far. Edit in digital, zero quality loss, output to DVD and wow.</p><p></p><p>Well, when someone hires you for your results, and you show up with a Handycam, people wonder. Their uncle Steve who likes gadgets has the same one. Rich uncle Fred has a better one (and he will tell you so).</p><p></p><p>So, sure, you can do pro stuff with a Spark. Or a Mavic Air. But if nephew Johnny has the same thing, expect some conflict. Personally, I wouldn't do work with anything less than a Mavic Pro, preferably a Phantom 4 Pro. You WANT and NEED manual features (exposure, ISO, resolution). Advertising you can do 4k even if the output wont be is an asset. </p><p></p><p>Just saying.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="suprPHREAK, post: 40493, member: 1505"] You are mostly right. There is still the idea that big eauals professional. I used to shoot wedding videos. It was at a time when digital video was just starting to get hold, and so people were transitioning to DV cameras. Prior to that was analog video cameras, usually SVHS. It doesnt take an expert to see the difference in quality from analog to digital. As a result, my first digital camera to do work with was a small MiniDV Handycam. Sony used to still put manual controls on their consumer products so I could still get a very good picture, better than my VHS by far. Edit in digital, zero quality loss, output to DVD and wow. Well, when someone hires you for your results, and you show up with a Handycam, people wonder. Their uncle Steve who likes gadgets has the same one. Rich uncle Fred has a better one (and he will tell you so). So, sure, you can do pro stuff with a Spark. Or a Mavic Air. But if nephew Johnny has the same thing, expect some conflict. Personally, I wouldn't do work with anything less than a Mavic Pro, preferably a Phantom 4 Pro. You WANT and NEED manual features (exposure, ISO, resolution). Advertising you can do 4k even if the output wont be is an asset. Just saying. [/QUOTE]
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