Hey buddy you messed up some specs about the Arri (and there are some "wrong" ones about the Komodo) ... e.g. you have nemed the specs for the "Alev-III A2X" sensor version from the Mini_LF and not the original Mini, the resolution of the sensor is NOT 4K-DCI - instead it has a 3,2K sensor (which can internaly upscale to UHD - even though noone should do that from a technical and quality perspective) ... and you should have just named the power-consumtion instead of "how long does the camera last with a random not defined battery" ... the Mini also can record in 422 (and as far as I remember also 422HQ (also the term "4:4:4" is just the chromasubsampling type) the actual format is 422, 422HQ, 4444 or 4444XQ) ... I think that those two cameras have a different target group ... nearly all the movies and commercials that I work on are shot on the Arri Alexa lineup (even though mostly the LF-versions or the new Alexa35) and there is a very good reason for this - but on the other hand I have seen some smaller projects that used the Komodo as their primary camera to have a more efficient workflow with a smaller crew and I have seen many bigger productions that used the Komodo as their crash-/drone-/underwater-/action-camera where the lighter and smaller formfactor comes in handy ... But for a "everyday A camera" I would still go for the Alexa Mini, because of it's colorscience and better dynamicrange ...
Different tools. Don't believe to Red's dynamic range, it's no where close to any Alexa. The mini has at least 2 stops more range than the Komodo plus better color. Alexa is also better in low light. Don't know why Red fiddles with their claimed DR numbers so much, it's not honest. Komodo is a fantastic camera though. V-Raptor is a great camera and better in low light than Alexa, but Alexa is still better in terms of color and DR.
The red dynamic range is not technically a lie but it can only be achieved by the camera shooting a frame with a faster shutter speed after each actual frame and then compositing them back together. This gives you weird highlights without motion blur and is apparently not usable in most situations. Arri also uses two images with different exposures but it is implemented on a hardware level and records both images at the same time and with the same shutter speed.
@@strawberrybruh HDRX (two exposures combined into one by increasing the shutter speed on one of the frames) isn’t available on the Red Komodo. I think the only current red camera that can do that is the Raptor X. It was on option available the older cameras too. Red makes amazing cameras, my comment was to point out that numbers on a sheet from a manufacturer often lie or mislead which is frustrating.
The arri is the industry standard
Alexa mini sensor size - 28.25 x 18.17 mm / 1.112 x 0.715"
Hey buddy you messed up some specs about the Arri (and there are some "wrong" ones about the Komodo) ... e.g. you have nemed the specs for the "Alev-III A2X" sensor version from the Mini_LF and not the original Mini, the resolution of the sensor is NOT 4K-DCI - instead it has a 3,2K sensor (which can internaly upscale to UHD - even though noone should do that from a technical and quality perspective) ... and you should have just named the power-consumtion instead of "how long does the camera last with a random not defined battery" ... the Mini also can record in 422 (and as far as I remember also 422HQ (also the term "4:4:4" is just the chromasubsampling type) the actual format is 422, 422HQ, 4444 or 4444XQ) ...
I think that those two cameras have a different target group ... nearly all the movies and commercials that I work on are shot on the Arri Alexa lineup (even though mostly the LF-versions or the new Alexa35) and there is a very good reason for this - but on the other hand I have seen some smaller projects that used the Komodo as their primary camera to have a more efficient workflow with a smaller crew and I have seen many bigger productions that used the Komodo as their crash-/drone-/underwater-/action-camera where the lighter and smaller formfactor comes in handy ...
But for a "everyday A camera" I would still go for the Alexa Mini, because of it's colorscience and better dynamicrange ...
Different tools. Don't believe to Red's dynamic range, it's no where close to any Alexa. The mini has at least 2 stops more range than the Komodo plus better color. Alexa is also better in low light. Don't know why Red fiddles with their claimed DR numbers so much, it's not honest. Komodo is a fantastic camera though. V-Raptor is a great camera and better in low light than Alexa, but Alexa is still better in terms of color and DR.
The red dynamic range is not technically a lie but it can only be achieved by the camera shooting a frame with a faster shutter speed after each actual frame and then compositing them back together. This gives you weird highlights without motion blur and is apparently not usable in most situations. Arri also uses two images with different exposures but it is implemented on a hardware level and records both images at the same time and with the same shutter speed.
@@strawberrybruh HDRX (two exposures combined into one by increasing the shutter speed on one of the frames) isn’t available on the Red Komodo. I think the only current red camera that can do that is the Raptor X. It was on option available the older cameras too. Red makes amazing cameras, my comment was to point out that numbers on a sheet from a manufacturer often lie or mislead which is frustrating.
Wrong details
Chapucero!!!
My bmpcc6k 😊
My eye win 576 megapixel
arri pl mount
Arri
Red Komodo
Arri
Song?
I downloaded the music from envato, man. Here's the result in Shazam: Smooth Jazz Elegant · VICTORY INS
@@CAMERAF Thanks. Tried using Shazam but had no matches so I contacted you.
What handheld portable cameras do you recommend?
I can give advice based on what you will use it for. If you want, send a dm on Instagram and we can talk there. @fatihenesero
Arri
Can you explain why?
@@CAMERAFi think arri is the most used cinema camera on any movies
And also arri is more expensive than red