Sign up now and get a free Tip Sheet for Videographers!

Sony Mini DV Camcorder Review: DCR-TRV80

$1,499
Sony Electronics
1 Sony Drive
Park Ridge, NJ 07656
(887) 865-SONY
www.sonystyle.com

Remember in grammar school when your lunches included a hybrid eating utensil called a spork? Come on, you remember: it was a cross between a spoon and a fork, round with little spikes at the end. The new DCR-TRV80 Network Handycam from Sony, is versatile, like a spork. Not only is it a video camera, but also a 2.1 megapixel digital still camera with Bluetooth and networking capabilities. This camcorder has a playground full of features that are easy enough for newcomers to handle, but packs enough advanced features to keep intermediate shooters happy.

Small but Comfortable

The TRV80 gets good grades for looks, sporting a modern silver finish with blue and black accents. The form factor is small and compact, but not too small. It's comfortable to hold and easy to handle. Sony packed plenty of accessories in the box, including an 8MB Memory Stick and a silver lens hood that looks good and helps to reduce lens flare.

Still Motion

For a one-CCD camera, the TRV80 produced great video. The image was crisp and bright with proper lighting conditions. It accurately reproduced flesh tones and non-organic subjects had clear and accurate colors as well.

The only visible indicators that the TRV80 is also a digital camera are a silver and blue logo that says "Megapixel" and a tiny silver button on the top of the camera labeled photo. Pressing the silver photo button half way pops up a concealed flash from the front of the camera when light levels are low. Pressing the button further takes a snapshot and saves 1600x1200 images to a Sony Memory Stick. The quality of the stills is excellent, with sharp and beautiful colors. The resolution is twice what you'll ever need for the Internet or e-mail and even 3x5 or 4x6 prints looked quite nice. Memory Stick-compatible devices include Sony PDAs, computers, cell phones and even car stereos. Even if your device does not have a Memory Stick reader, the supplied USB cable will do the trick on just about any computer. We connected the TRV80 to an Apple PowerBook, which automatically launched iPhoto for effortless transfer of still images.

Wireless Connectivity

The TRV80 is a Network Handycam with the ability to connect to a network to surf the Web or send and receive e-mail. When near a compatible Bluetooth device, the TRV80 can connect to an Ethernet network, a dialup modem or to a computer wirelessly. Once connected to a network, you can surf to any URL using the 3.5-inch screen as your monitor and the touch screen menus for navigation. Sent e-mails can also include attachments of photos or movie clips. Unfortunately, the accessories needed to take advantage of all of these features are not included in the box. Although we were not able to test this feature, the camera is also designed to connect to Bluetooth cell phones and print images wirelessly to compatible printers.

A standout feature of the TRV80 is the 3.5-inch LCD display. This huge beautiful display can swivel 270 degrees and has excellent color and clarity. Entering URLs and composing e-mails can be a chore on the virtual keyboard, but the large LCD is pleasant to view. You can adjust all of the settings from the camera's menus, which you select using touch-sensitive buttons on the LCD. The interface for these menus were straightforward, easy to navigate and very user friendly. While the touch-screen menu system is superb, the camera body itself has very few buttons. This is a good/bad situation. It's good because it makes the camera extremely accessible and unintimidating to beginners. The downside is that you always need to navigate menus, even to adjust something as basic as the exposure.

Page: 1 2
  • Sponsors

Rate This Article

Rating: 1 (Poor) - 5 (Excellent)

1 2 3 4 5
How would you rate the author of this article?
How Would you rate the overall value of this article?
How would you rate the graphics?
How would you rate this article's method (i.e interview, tutorial, narrative) for explaining this topic?
How would you rate the depth and length of the article