To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more

Canon Legria HF M406 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £514
inc VAT

The M-series has numerous useful features, but its video quality can't match that of Panasonic's HDC-SD800.

Specifications

1/3in CMOS sensor, 1,920×1,080, 1,440×1,080, 10.0x zoom, 350g

http://www.morecomputers.com
[/vc_column_text]

The M-series is broader than its Panasonic competitor, with a more pronounced hump along the top and a totally flat side beneath the grip; we found all this made it more comfortable to hold for long periods. The HDC-SD800’s supplied battery protrudes slightly from the rear of the camcorder, and a larger one would stick out far more. The M-series on the other hand has a huge battery recess, which the supplied two hour and 13 minute battery only half fills, so you could add a far larger replacement, lasting nearly seven hours, without it impeding your use of the camcorder.

Canon Legria HF M406 battery
Here you can see the deep battery well, with the battery pack half-removed

The lens has a 10x optical zoom range, with a 35mm camera equivalence of 43.6-436mm. It’s a decent range, though we prefer the noticeably wider 35-420mm range of the HDC-SD800, which only sacrifices a little at the telephoto end. The M-series use a single 1/3in CMOS with 2.3-megapixels, a very different proposition from its Panasonic competitor from with its 3-chip array of smaller sensors with higher pixel counts. We’re yet to see Sony’s camcorders for this year.

Test footage showed accurate colours and well-balanced exposures, motion is smoothly captured too. However, it lacked the fine detail and sharp edges that we’ve become accustomed to on Panasonic’s new models. The larger sensor makes it superior in a wide range of conditions to the cheaper Panasonic HDC-SD90, with its single 1/4.1in sensor. There was barely any noise in our low-light test and the frame rate stayed smooth, but that can also be said of the SD800. It seems that the benefits of the sensor in low-light, an advantage born of its relatively low pixel count, then count against it in brighter conditions. Here camcorders can make use of pixels above-and-beyond the two million needed to form a Full HD image, and use them to generate sharper and more detail-packed video. You can see this in the 100% frame grabs below, and in our office plant shots in the gallery.

M406 church crop
Canon HF M-series (click to zoom)

SD800 church crop
Panasonic HDC-SD800 (click to zoom)

The M-series camcorders all have optical image stabilisation, unlike the cheaper R-series with its electronic system. In our labs test, using a vibrating table, it did excellently, and there was barely any motion in the final footage, with the same slight shimmer of movement we saw on the HDC-SD800.

At just over £500, the Canon Legria HF M406 is a little cheaper than Panasonic’s three-chip HDC-SD800. It has some useful features, such as the accessory shoe, big battery recess and dual-card slots, but unless any of these are essential to you then the SD800 wins out for its superior image quality in good lighting conditions. The M-series is superior in less ideal conditions to the HDC-SD90, but then at over a hundred pounds more, it should be. This leaves the M406 (and its more expensive brethren) stuck between a rock and a hard place; only those who are desperate to add an external mic, but who can’t stretch to £680 for Panasonic’s HDC-SD900 (review coming soon), should buy an M-series.

Pages: 1 2

Basic Specifications

Rating ****

Recording

Optical zoom 10.0x
Digital zoom 200x
Sensor 1/3in CMOS
Sensor pixels 2,370,000
Widescreen mode native
LCD screen size 3.0in
Viewfinder type colour
Video lamp No
Video recording format AVCHD
Video recording media SDXC
Sound Dolby Digital Stereo
Video resolutions 1,920×1,080, 1,440×1,080
Maximum image resolution 1,920×1,080
Memory slot 2x SDXC
Mermory supplied none
Flash no

Physical

Digital inputs/outputs USB
Analogue inputs/outputs AV out, component out, mini HDMI out
Other connections charge jack, microphone, headphones, Canon accessory shoe
Battery type Li-ion 6.3W 850mAh
Battery life 2h 13m
Battery charging position camcorder
Size 71x74x131mm
Weight 350g

Buying Information

Warranty one-year RTB
Price £514
Supplier http://www.morecomputers.com
Details www.canon.co.uk

Read more

Reviews