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Panasonic HDC-TM300 Prices

Latest Reviews

Color & Noise Performance Summary
The Panasonic HDC-TM300 • Colors are accurate and vivid, as can be said of most high-end consumer camcorders this year.
• Brown and pink hues were very minorly skewed
• Noise levels are low—about average for the competition
previous Product Tour (Page 3 of 17) Motion & Sharpness Performance next

 

Color (9.54)


The Panasonic HDC-TM300 proved to have excellent color performance in our bright light testing. This comes as no surprise, since its hard drive equivalent, the HDC-HS300 also performed very well. The TM300 recorded a color error of just 3.67 and a saturation level of 96.2%. These are certainly among the best scores we've recorded so far this year, matching the results of the top-tier models from Canon and Sanyo. The color performance of the TM300 was better than that of Sony and Samsung camcorders this year. Only the surprising JVC GZ-HM200 had significantly superior color accuracy.  (More on how we test color.)

Color Accuracy Performance
The Panasonic HDC-TM300 at 3000 lux auto The Panasonic HDC-TM300 color error chart
Color Test Chart (above), Color Error Map (right)
The Panasonic HDC-TM300 produced a color error of 3.67 and a saturation level of 96.2% in our bright light color testing. (The map on the right is a diagram of the color error. The length and direction of each line indicates how the camcorder processed each particular color.)

In the color error map above, you can see that the the TM300 struggled most in the brown and red tones, while doing an excellent job of reproducing all the other colors. The high saturation level already produces strong, deep colors, but the camcorder does offer an option to adjust color gain on a scale from -5 to +5. The crops below demonstrate the saturation range available using this tool.

Panasonic HDC-TM300 Color Modes
The Panasonic HDC-TM300 in auto mode The Panasonic HDC-TM300 in auto mode, 100% crop
Auto 100% Crop
Color -5 100% Crop
Color +5 100% Crop
Soft Skin 100% Crop

Though there aren't very many increments on Color Depth feature, you can see that ratching to -5 or +5 does actually produce a significant different in the recorded saturation. This is a nice option to have on a consumer camcorder if you have an aesthetic preference that isn't easily reproduced with post-production editing software. The few camcorders that offer a similar option—such as the Canon HF S100—are often even more limited in their number of increments.

Panasonic HDC-TM300 Color Comparisons
Panasonic HDC-TM300 Canon HF S100
Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900

For comparison, we selected the Canon HF S100 (which many people may be weighing up against the TM300) and two less traditional consumer camcorders new to the market this year. The Sony HDR-TG5V did an excellent job of reproducing the saturation of our Chroma DuMonde chart, but it struggled in accurately portraying greens and pinks. The JVC Everio GZ-X900 did quite a bit better with color accuracy—matching the TM300 easily—but the colors were far less saturated than what we are accustomed to seeing in high-end consumer camcorders. As for the Canon HF S100, the two camcorders had very similar color performance, with the showing slightly more accuracy and slightly less saturation.

  Close-Up Color Comparisons
   
  Ideal Panasonic
HDC-TM300
Canon HF S100 Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900
Red
  Ideal Panasonic
HDC-TM300
Canon HF S100 Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900
Green
  Ideal Panasonic
HDC-TM300
Canon HF S100 Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900
Blue
  Ideal Panasonic
HDC-TM300
Canon HF S100 Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900
Skin
Tone 1
  Ideal Panasonic
HDC-TM300
Canon HF S100 Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900
Skin
Tone 2

All of this year's top models from the major manufacturers are boasting excellent color performance in bright light. That makes the TM300 more of the rule than an exception in this category. Rest assured that if you spend $800 or more on a 2009 camcorder, the colors in bright lighting conditions will be accurate and vivid.

Color Performance Scores The Canon HF S100 Compare the Panasonic HDC-TM300
to the Canon HF S100

The Sony HDR-TG5V Compare the Panasonic HDC-TM300
to the Sony HDR-TG5V
The JVC GZ-X900 Compare the Panasonic HDC-TM300
to the JVC GZ-X900

 

Noise (10.37)


Panasonic camcorders are doing very well this year in terms of producing clear, low-noise footage in bright light. The TM300, like its HS300 hard-drive counterpart, beats out the vast majority of the competition in terms of clarity in bright light. The camcorder averaged 0.55% noise: not quite as good as the scores of the Sony HDR-XR520V or the Sony HDR-TG5V, but better than the Canon HF S100, the Sanyo VPC-HD2000, and several other 2009 camcorders. (More on how we test noise.)

Noise Comparisons
Panasonic HDC-TM300
100% Crop
Canon HF S100
100% Crop
Sony HDR-TG5V
100% Crop
JVC GZ-X900
100% Crop

As you can see from the crops above, most high-end consumer camcorders today do an excellent job of filtering out the noise in bright lighting conditions. In fact, even at a 100% crop, it can be hard to see the noise detected by our software analysis. Of the camcorders selected for comparison, the HF S100 has the most noise, while the others have similarly low noise levels.

Noise Performance Scores The Canon HF S100 Compare the Panasonic HDC-TM300
to the Canon HF S100
The Sony HDR-TG5V Compare the Panasonic HDC-TM300
to the Sony HDR-TG5V
The JVC GZ-X900 Compare the Panasonic HDC-TM300
to the JVC GZ-X900

 

 

See how the competition stacked up against the Panasonic HDC-TM300
  The Canon HF S100 The Sony HDR-TG5V The JVC GZ-X900
  Canon HF S100 Sony HDR-TG5V JVC GZ-X900

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