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Panasonic NV-GS300 review

Our rating

3.0 stars out of 5

User rating

4.5 stars out of 5

See all 3 user reviews

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Verdict

Offering superb video quality under a wide variety of lighting conditions, the Panasonic NV-GS300 is an excellent choice if you typically shoot in automatic mode. Prosumers may find the limited choice and the awkward accessibility of the manual settings frustrating, however

Good

  • Excellent video quality
  • Impressive low-light performance
  • Effective image stabilisation

Bad

  • Relatively few manual settings
  • Awkward joystick control

In this review

The NV-GS300, Panasonic's midrange consumer three-CCD camcorder, arrives at a lower price than last year's model, the NV-GS250. As with its higher-end sibling, the NV-GS500, Panasonic adds a few new features and, unfortunately, deletes others. The primary appeal of this camera is its trio of CCD chips, which allow it to capture richer colour and sharper images than single-CCD cameras. The sharp video and the addition of a wide-screen LCD will appeal to HDTV owners looking for good image quality at a price less than that of a true HD camcorder. Its limited feature list, however, may well disappoint experienced video buffs looking for the shooting flexibility offered by cameras loaded with manual and automatic feature settings.

Design
Weighing 510g, the Panasonic PV-GS300's solidly built silver-plastic case has a squat design that's comfortable for one-handed use. The tape ejects upwards, allowing you to swap tapes while using a tripod. However, you'll have to remove the camcorder from the tripod to swap the Secure Digital memory cards used for stills, as the card slot is on the bottom.

The NV-GS300's control layout is almost identical to that of the NV-GS500 -- minimalist. You perform most adjustments via the menus, navigating with a small, hard-to-manage joystick that sits in the centre of the mode wheel. The onscreen menus are easy to understand, but the process of changing settings is tedious. We'd have preferred at least a few dedicated buttons for often-used functions such as backlight compensation. Then again, Panasonic designed the GS300 for the point-and-shoot crowd, providing the typical assortment of program autoexposure modes, highlighted by manual shutter and aperture, adjustable white balance and a macro mode. You also use the joystick for focusing manually -- an imprecise tool that makes us long for the focus ring of the GS250.

Features
The NV-GS300's biggest improvement over the NV-GS250 is its widescreen, 69mm (2.7-inch) LCD. Colourful, with good detail rendering, the LCD works great for framing shots, though it's a bit too small to give you the precision needed for manual focus. The optical image stabilisation on the NV-GS300 is quite effective -- very little image shake is evident when shooting handheld at full 10x zoom. Autofocus and exposure react accurately when panning from close, well-lit objects to distant, shadowed scenes, though sometimes there's a perceptible delay. Battery life is solid, providing more than an hour of start/stop recording and as much as two hours of continuous shooting.

Image quality
The chief advantages of three-CCD models are richer colour and better low-light performance, and the three 800,000-pixel CCDs clearly make a difference here. Footage shot outdoors in sunlight looked very sharp and detailed, with accurate, vibrant colour. Moving indoors into regular room light -- a situation where things can start to get grainy with single-CCD consumer camcorders -- resulted in equally sharp footage with little or no visible graininess. Only in dim light did noise become intrusive. But even then, video retained an above-average level of colour, albeit with a reddish cast. The MagicPix mode lets you use the LCD to illuminate dark subjects, though this does little to improve dark shots. Still quality for outdoor and indoor shots using the built-in flash is acceptable for small, uncropped prints. However, zooming in even slightly reveals significant noise and a general lack of detail.

The GS300 records sound very well, too, and incorporates an effective wind filter as well as an audio-zoom feature. It has a jack for an external microphone, though it lacks the headphone jack that's found on the NV-GS250.

If you have a good eye for video but a bad time with technology, then the Panasonic NV-GS300 will deliver exactly what you want -- great video quality with minimum fuss. But if you like to tweak and experiment even occasionally, don't go here.

Edited by Lori Grunin
Additional editing by Kate Macefield

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User reviews3

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tinam's avatar

tinam 11 September 2010

Good: Excellent video playback, really clear and bright colours when playing back on TV. Easy to use, just keep it on Auto and away you go.

Bad: Nothing, apart from the fact that after 3 years of ownership and not a huge amount of usage it has stopped working. Seems theres a fault with the processor which prevents it from being able to record anything. I can still play back recordings on it. Really disappointed that its gone wrong so soon.

Comment: Great camcorder. Just wondered if this is a common problem though as its not cheap to repair.

I own it
stevehobfg's avatar
4 stars out of 5

stevehobfg 21 August 2009

Good: Excellent picture quality...

Bad: Standard battery life just abou adequate, buy an upgrade.

Comment: Can we first get something off my chest about a lot of ratings given to equiment on this site (and almost all others).

This review is for a camcorder. So its purpose is to faithfully record pictures and sound. Unless it does this well I feel it cannot be given a high rating. I am constantly reading reviews that will say' the pictures and sound are so'so', But it got 'SO many bells and whistles' it gets a rating of 9!

It doesn't matter if its got inbuilt tea maker, mp3 player and mobile phone, if the pictures are poor its rubbish...Sorry...rant over...many apologies!

This camcorder with its 3-CCD swtup produces beautiful HD quality movies, the lens is good and the automatic focus and exposure are very good too. Leave it in auto and just use the on/off and zoom controls and you'll be a very happy snapper. Its easy to carry and use, although I have big hands and it makes the zoom a little bit of a squash, but no-one else has a problem. So, unless your also 6'4" plus, ignore this comment.

The inbuilt mic suprised me with its ability, it says its a 'zoom mic' and in use... it is. Playback in a decent stereo you can heard the far sounds increase, and the near ones fade...great trick!

The only weaknesses I've found are in low (party) lighting the picture gets a bit noisy. Conversely in very low light (moon and stars) the picture gets much better?

The standard battery life, using the good quality LCD screen is a little short, but larger aftermarket batteries are available cheaply. Using the eyepiece greatly increases battery life, but the screen is so goon (even in sunlight) that I rarely use it.

Like most people i read about the other bells'n'whistles, but I've never needed to use the so I can't comment. The only other thing I do is link it to the PC and go editing, which was asy from the very first time.

The still camera function is reasonable quality for a 3mp camera, but it is not its forte. Better to keep the footage rolling, you never know you may get something unexpected for 'You've been framed'.

Overall, a very good, high quality camcorder that you can still find, if you do grab yourself a bargain.

stevehobfg's avatar
4.5 stars out of 5

stevehobfg 4 December 2008

Good: Quality of the videos is SUPERB!

Bad: Not much... the bottom feed for the SD cards is idiosyncratic!

Comment: I bought this for a month long family holiday through the Canadian Rockies-Vancouver Island-Seattle-Mt St Helens. I bought it on the strength of the Cnet review off the internet for less than £300.

I used it constantly for the full month using over 20 tapes in every possible condition. Standing on the Columbia Icesheet at -23oC, to monsoon rains in Vancouver, to a 45oC! shopping trip in Edmonton. It always functioned well and battery life was good, although I did buy a second one a week into the trip just for convenience sake.

It fits in your hand perfectly and all the important controls are easy to use which was a pleasant suprise after my previous Canon unit. It light so you don't feel it even after prolonged use. I only used the Automatic setting throughout the trip and they always seems to cope admirably with all the conditions I threw at it.

But, the real treat was after we'd returned home. We played the tapes back...what wonderful, colour rich pictures! There are no visible abberations even on my 50" screen. The image stabilisation was also really good too. A high speed whaling trip looked smoother on video than it felt on the boat! I also got some lovely sunset shots, I think they also might look better than the real thing did!

The other nice suprise was the quality of the stereo sound from the in-built microphone. Not as good as the directional mic I used for most shots, but the quality was great for "grab'n'go" use with good suppression of wind noise.

The biggest suprise from its performance was at at nightime laser show on the Grand Coulee dam. I videoed proceedings not expecting much from it, but when I found that the results were really good, there was a little bit of low light fuzziness to the general shot, but the laser figures were clear and bright, and even the sound was clearly audible.

Overall, I can't praise this unit enough and would recommend it in a second! Well done Panasonic.

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