August Bradley Posted December 18, 2012 Report Share Posted December 18, 2012 (edited) I see a lot of refernces and endorsements of the Marshall 7" V-LCD70XHB-3GSDI, but no discussion of the more versatile and more capable Marshall 7" V-LCD70MD-3G The V-LCD70MD has higher resolution, lemo power jack, both SDI and HDMI input/output, lighter weight -- plus all the features of the other (800 nit brightness, flip, etc...). And it costs a little less. Is there any reason this model is not used as much on Steadicam? Thanks! Spec Summary: V-LCD70MD – 7” High Brightness Camera-Top Monitor with Modular Input / Output • High Brightness 800 nit LCD panel • 1024 x 600 panel • SDI Loop-Through • HDMI Loop-Through • Single MD slot for a variety of Inputs or Outputs • Adjustable LED Backlight • DSLR Ratio Adjustment • HDMI Auto Color Space and Ratio detect • Manual Gamma Adjustment • Image Flip • 1/4”-20 mounts on all sides • Variety of Markers, including user-adjustable • False Color • Peaking Filter • RGB Check Field / Field Detect • 15:9, 16:9, 4:3, Pixel-to-Pixel modes • 4 user-configurable function buttons • Scratch Resistant Protective Screen • RGB gain and bias control • Variety of User-Replaceable Battery Adapters available Edited December 18, 2012 by August Bradley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Eric Fletcher S.O.C. Posted December 18, 2012 Premium Members Report Share Posted December 18, 2012 800 Nits that's why, that's not bright enough for outdoor use. I've also never really been a fan of the AR coatings that Marshall uses Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Mark Schlicher Posted December 18, 2012 Premium Members Report Share Posted December 18, 2012 It's a newer model and that's probably the main reason it's not widely adopted as an alternative to the 70XHB. No worse than the XHB, and all of the advantages that you mention. But shares with the XHB the big disadvantage Eric notes (though it's not impossible to use outdoors, particularly on a cloudy day, but it's a world of pain in the sunshine, which rules it out for high-end operators). The only prosumer/mid-grade monitor that offers something approaching daylight visibility is the Marshall 6.5" transflective (which has its own shortcomings compared to high-end monitors like Cinetronic.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.