Hi Chris.
We will publish our findings if we can get round to testing rest assured. We'll also see how it handles post-processing and perhaps try out some green-screen if Jamie at Sumners is interested.
However DVCProHD is 4:2:2 the same as DVCPro50. DVCPro50 is less compressed than DVCProHD but obviously DVCProHD records the most resolution.
From early playing with it, I can state that it does record a really nice image in both SD (DVCPro50 & even standard DV looks nice), and in HD. I've seen well lit Sony Z1 footage without any post-processing, and now seen PAL HVX200 footage without post-processing and the HVX200 looks far nicer 'out of the box. It just isn't as good as the Z1 under low-light.
So this is the camera to have if you can light your scenes well, or are shooting in a decent lit environment.
If you are thinking of buying the camera, please also bear in mind that there's the P2 cards to purchase. An 8gb P2 card is over £1000 at the moment, and records 8 minutes of DVCProHD 1080p footage - 16 minutes of DVCPro50 - or 20 minutes of DVCProHD 720pn (native). You can only record at different frame rates to under or overcrank the footage in 720pn mode.
Of course you get 32 mins of DV or DVCPro recording too.
It's then your job to offload the footage elsewhere so that you can wipe the card and use again.
It sounds a bit of extra work but it was cool to be able to just drag and drop DVCPro50 footage into Avid last night instead of digitising.
Another thing to bear in mind is that Avid doesn't currently support PAL DVCProHD 720pn or 720p. They are currently working on a fix which should be appearing sometime this month. I don't think any NLE works (Final Cut, Premiere, etc) with those PAL formats yet apart from Edius Broadcast.
You can however record DVCProHD 1080p, DVCProHD 1080i, DVCPro50, DVCPro and DV and Avid works with them fine, I've tested them personally
