Home :: Cameras :: Camcorders :: Digital Camcorders  

Digital DVD
Digital MicroMV
Digital MiniDV
Digital Tapeless
Digital8
Canon XL1S MiniDV Digital Camcorder with SuperRange Optical Image Stabilization & Interchangable Lenses

Canon XL1S MiniDV Digital Camcorder with SuperRange Optical Image Stabilization & Interchangable Lenses

List Price: $4,999.99
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The truth is...
Review: What's reviewer: "a customer" & "Tyrone Brumwell"...thinking! There is a Canon XL2 comming out next month in August. I contacted Canon USA and verified it. You can do the same at 1-800-OkCanon. SAVE your money for this new beauty ($4,000) it will be worth it! Read the specs at canon's website. The Xl1 and XL1s, don't come close!!!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: No Xl2 yet, maybe never...
Review: What's with bonehead "and now, only as Canon can do it better they are coming out with Canon XL2 in Feb 2004"...? people are just making stuff up about the fictional XL2. The XL1 and XL1s are both competent cameras, and will serve the purposes of most videographers wanting to shoot using the Mini DV format. One thing I do appreciate with the XL1 is that features like iris adjustment and white balance are utilized with dedicated buttons on the camera body. Some of the newer, supposedly "superior" Mini DV cameras are now putting these adjustments in the menu section, making it a pain to adjust quickly when shooting.

As for the XL2, everyone thought that Canon would announce it at the NAB show in April 2004, but nothing was forthcoming. Meanwhile cameras that came out in response to the XL1s from companies like Sony and Panasonic have already been updated and released in their second version.

Bottom line, there just may not be a XL2 in the works. It certainly seems that Canon is content to continue to sell the XL1s as its top of the line camcorder. Rather than an "upgrade" to the XL1s, Canon may be working on a completely different camera, and who knows when it may be released for sale to the public. I am sure if there was a really cool "XL2" within 6 months of release, someone would have heard something about it by now. Interesting is that the "XL" designation comes from the old Super 8mm cameras, with Canon 1014 "XLs" being the last Super 8mm they made before abandoning the format.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates