Best JVC Camcorder Reviews, 500 - 750 Pounds
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CNET UK > Reviews > Cameras and Camcorders > Camcorders
JVC Everio GZ-MC200 review
We've seen small camcorders before, but the MC200 ushers in a whole new generation of handheld camcorders that you can almost enclose in your palm. These suckers are small, really small. If you've been reluctant to take a camcorder on holiday because of the size of the things, you might be swayed by the MC200 -- it's the same size as a rolled-up pair of socks Read more
17 May 2005 by Chris Stevens
CNET UK > Reviews > Cameras and Camcorders > Camcorders
JVC Everio GZ-HD40 review
The reasonably compact Everio GZ-HD40 is a dual-format high-definition camcorder, shooting in both AVCHD and MPEG-2 TS, allowing you to get the best of both worlds. The menu system is convoluted, but the HD40 offers very good video quality and plenty of manual options Read more
10 March 2009 by Joshua Goldman
CNET UK > Reviews > Cameras and Camcorders > Camcorders
JVC Everio GZ-HM550 review
The JVC Everio GZ-HM550's picture quality certainly cuts the mustard and we like some of its innovative features, but there are cheaper, easier-to-control camcorders available. Read more
31 August 2010 by Nik Rawlinson
CNET UK > Reviews > Cameras and Camcorders > Camcorders
JVC Everio GZ-MG77EK review
The JVC Everio GZ-MG77EK records its video on an internal 30GB hard disk, which allows you to save as much as 7 hours of video at the highest quality or a staggering 37 hours of footage at the lowest-quality. It's extremely lightweight and compact, but the video quality simply doesn't stack up against that of most MiniDV or DVD camcorders Read more
19 May 2006 by Denny Atkin
CNET UK > Reviews > Cameras and Camcorders > Camcorders
JVC Everio GZ-MG77 review
JVC's hard-disk-based GZ-MG77 has sacrificed some of its features for affordability -- it only has a single CCD, as opposed to its more expensive 3CCD sibling, the MG505, and the zoom comes nowhere near tape-based models. If you're a casual user, however, who wants to record straight to hard disk, it might just suffice Read more
22 August 2006 by Chris Stevens
