Christoffer Glans
Well-known member
I've seen a lot of people having problems with their SDI ports. Personally, I've yet to use the one on mine but plan on getting a monitor to use in a setup like everyone else. But all of these issues make me wonder what is going on?
I'm not talking about people using unshielded 3G cables going through a startup sequence that increase the risk of shorting the SDI port, but those who bought 12G cables and still had their SDI ports stop functioning. Why? Shouldn't a shielded 12G connection be somewhat safe? And if the monitor uses onboard batteries, does that not mean there's no current flowing from the camera power source? And what happens when you need to change batteries on the monitor, do we have to turn off everything and go through all the decoupling sequences in order to start things up again? So if the monitor dies during a shoot and you change batteries, what happens then?
The number of people having problems with the SDI port worries me and I don't understand why Red doesn't sell tested SDI cables or recommend brands when they've at the same time pointed out how important the cables are when working with this camera. I actually don't know where to get cables because there are no direct "approved cables" and when people get problems with 12G cables that should work it could be that the cable itself is of bad quality.
In any case, I've never seen so many issues with SDI outputs on a camera. It's like it's made of glass. Even though the startup cable sequence is standard for any camera, I've never seen such a large number of cases. It should be extremely rare that this happens?
Can red please answer this, or put together a list of companies and cables that are considered tested and approved to use. As well as more details on which methods of powering monitors are considered low risk? I really don't want to do a hit-and-miss getting cables or powering cables that screw up the SDI because it's as sensitive as putting a fork in the power outlet.
I'm not talking about people using unshielded 3G cables going through a startup sequence that increase the risk of shorting the SDI port, but those who bought 12G cables and still had their SDI ports stop functioning. Why? Shouldn't a shielded 12G connection be somewhat safe? And if the monitor uses onboard batteries, does that not mean there's no current flowing from the camera power source? And what happens when you need to change batteries on the monitor, do we have to turn off everything and go through all the decoupling sequences in order to start things up again? So if the monitor dies during a shoot and you change batteries, what happens then?
The number of people having problems with the SDI port worries me and I don't understand why Red doesn't sell tested SDI cables or recommend brands when they've at the same time pointed out how important the cables are when working with this camera. I actually don't know where to get cables because there are no direct "approved cables" and when people get problems with 12G cables that should work it could be that the cable itself is of bad quality.
In any case, I've never seen so many issues with SDI outputs on a camera. It's like it's made of glass. Even though the startup cable sequence is standard for any camera, I've never seen such a large number of cases. It should be extremely rare that this happens?
Can red please answer this, or put together a list of companies and cables that are considered tested and approved to use. As well as more details on which methods of powering monitors are considered low risk? I really don't want to do a hit-and-miss getting cables or powering cables that screw up the SDI because it's as sensitive as putting a fork in the power outlet.