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Canon MV830i review

Our rating

3.0 stars out of 5

User rating

4 stars out of 5

See all 2 user reviews

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Verdict

Canon's affordable, compact MV830i performs beautifully when the lights are bright, but you're probably better off with its less expensive sibling, the MV800

Good

  • Superb colour quality
  • Choice of automated and manual shooting modes
  • Low price
  • Solid battery life
  • Supports add-on lenses and filters

Bad

  • Few manual controls
  • Bottom-loading tape compartment
  • No accessory shoe
  • Poor low-light performance
  • Captures low-resolution stills

In this review

One of four models in Canon's affordable MV8 MiniDV camcorder series, the MV830i offers home and holiday videographers the tools they need to capture decent-quality video. Its amenities include a 20x optical zoom, photo capture and an Easy mode that caters to novices by automating just about everything. However, most of these features can also be found on Canon's MV800, which costs about £50 less. We think that's the better buy, though both models perform equally in terms of video quality. They're great when shooting outdoors or under bright lights but dismal when the lights are low.

Unless you're specifically interested in its wireless remote and Webcam capabilities, the Canon MV830i offers no real advantages over the less expensive MV800. The latter lacks still-image-capture capabilities, but they're of such little value at this resolution that it's hardly a deal breaker.

Design
Physically identical to other models in Canon's MV8 line, the MV830i weighs slightly more than 400g and fits comfortably in the hand. Its controls consist of the usual right-hand accoutrements (for example, a zoom rocker and a mode dial) and a smattering of buttons on the left side. Most of these perform two functions, depending on whether you're in record or playback mode, but they're clearly labelled and largely intuitive. Only one or two buttons -- AE Shift/End Search, for example -- necessitate opening the instruction manual.

To make moviemaking as expedient as possible, the MV830i's controls include dedicated Focus, Night Mode and Widescreen buttons. Pressing Focus instantly enables manual focus control -- you make the adjustments with the camera's jog dial. That dial also navigates you through the MV830i's simple onscreen menu system. A nearby switch toggles between Easy and Program modes. The former automatically manages all image settings, while the latter enables access to the camcorder's meagre manual settings, such as selectable shutter speeds (1/60 to 1/2,000 second) and white-balance presets.

Unsurprisingly, Canon's lithium-ion battery clips onto the rear of the camcorder, while tapes load from the bottom -- always an annoyance for tripod users. On the plus side, the viewfinder (in glorious technicolour) can extend backwards in case you want to clip on one of Canon's bulky extended-life batteries. And speaking of options, the MV830i supports Canon's add-on lenses and filters -- another nice perk.

Features
Indeed, apart from its 340,000-pixel (effective) image sensor, the MV830i's feature set reads like that of a pricier camcorder. For starters, it's capable of true 16:9 recording, meaning it uses the full width of the sensor -- no skewing or interpolating. It also features a 20x optical zoom, an analogue-to-digital converter, a handful of autoexposure scene modes and the usual hodgepodge of digital effects.

The only real letdown is Night mode, which effectively illuminates dim environments but requires both a tripod and a stationary subject to be useful. Otherwise, you get jerky, unwatchable video. And even with a tripod, low-light video exhibits excessive noise. To put it simply, leave the lights on -- and add more if possible. We wish the MV830i had an accessory shoe for adding a portable light source.

Performance
Like the MV800 below it and the MV850i above, the MV830i leverages its optics with Canon's Digic DV processing to capture crisp, colourful video -- under optimal lighting, that is. We found the zoom controls quick and responsive, though the autofocus wasn't particularly quick to lock on to a subject in changing scenes. Even so, it will be the rare home moviemaker who finds fault with the MV830i's video quality, especially if most shooting happens outdoors.

As for still photos, our general feeling is don't bother. Although the MV830i managed to reproduce colours accurately, our sample photos appeared grainy and slightly washed out, with brightly lit areas overexposed. None of this is too surprising, given the camera's 0.7-megapixel resolution, which is suitable for Web photos and little else. The same goes for the 320x240-pixel, 15fps Motion JPEG movies, which consistently looked jerky and sounded terrible.

Canon promises slightly less than an hour of typical recording time from the included battery, though you can shoot continuously, using the viewfinder only, for an impressive 135 minutes. Those are decent numbers for a camcorder in this category, though spare batteries are obviously essential for the holiday-bound.

Edited by Aimee Baldridge
Additional editing by Nick Hide

User reviews2

Add your review

David Scott's avatar
4 stars out of 5

David Scott 13 May 2006

Good: Quality of equipment, fits well in hand

Bad: Still camera is there for novelty only

Comment: Replaces my Canon Hi8 camcorder which looks enormous against this MV830i. A good camcorder especially now it is has been discounted - new models now out but preferred the look of this series more

Kelvin Smith's avatar
4 stars out of 5

Kelvin Smith 16 September 2005

Good: Great for true 16:9 widescreen recording, very good DVD-quality lens and DV for uploading to computer for editing to DVD.

Bad: Not great in low light conditions, doesn't comensate very well for camera shake, photos are too low quality for printing.

Comment: I've been using this for about eight months now and have found the difference from Hi-8 camcorders noticeable. It's very light and sleek and easy to use. I would recommend a tripod otherwise you'll need to rest on something or have a really steady hand.<br><br>
Watching the edited movie back on my 42-inch plasma (1024 x 768 pixels) doesn't show any flaws in the camera quality and looks as good as a top-quality DVD. While it's not a 3CCD camcorder for pros -- it's just 1CCD -- it's good enough for most for the £330 I paid. You will get it cheaper now.<br><br>
Editing on PC is easy and when you connect the DV to USB2 cable to the PC, it detects the device (Windows XP) and you're up and running. You can use any video editing application that supports DV input but make sure you can record to DVD or save as MPEG2 file for a keepsake on PC.<br><br>
I've gave this Canon 830i camcorder 8/10 because the pros outweigh the negatives on this camera for most. If you're very keen on getting the best results and have a bit of money spare, future-proof yourself with a 3CCD camcorder that gives pro broadcast results for about £550.

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