
Superb zoom reach; solid video quality; excellent battery life; simple controls
Poor still quality; obscure icons for manual settings; odd shifting effect from image stabilisation
FireWire cable and MiniDV cassettes
With its extreme zoom range and low price, the Panasonic NVGS35B is an excellent choice when you can't get close to your subject
6.4 Good
Reviewed by Denny Atkin
The Panasonic NVGS35B is in most respects a rather ordinary compact camcorder -- until you hit the zoom switch. With its far-reaching 30x optical zoom, the NVGS35B offers shooting flexibility that's unprecedented for a camera in its price class. With decent video quality and a good basic set of features, it's an excellent choice for shooting distant subjects.
Design
The Panasonic NVGS35B is fairly compact. Weighing slightly less than 500g, it's slightly shorter than typical MiniDV cameras, but it's also fairly wide, giving it a portly appearance. Its silver-and-grey shell makes for a very generic look, but the thick plastic feels sturdy and solid.



One bizarre engineering decision is the placement of the S-Video connector behind the battery along with the external power connector. You have to remove the battery and plug the camera into AC power in order to output via S-video.
The camera's slightly above-average width is probably due to the design of the MiniDV eject mechanism, which opens to the top of the camera. This lets you swap tapes without removing the camera from a tripod.
Features
The Panasonic NVGS35B's feature set offers everything you'd expect from a camera in its price range. It provides a full set of automatic controls for focus, exposure and white balance as well as an above-average suite of manual controls. You can manually adjust focus, iris, white balance, shutter speed and, unusually for such an affordable camcorder, gain.

Of course, the most impressive feature is the lens, which offers a full 30x optical-zoom range. Note that the lowest end of the zoom range offers a wider angle than you typically find on cameras in this class, giving you more shooting flexibility for close subjects as well as distant ones.
Other features include a simple fader, backlight compensation, a skin-texture-softening mode and a colour slow-shutter setting. The camera has a rather weak built-in video light as well. Five automatic scene settings include sports and portrait modes. There's also a wide-screen cinema mode.
The Panasonic NVGS35B includes USB and FireWire connectors as well as S-video and composite outputs. It lacks an S-video input, so you can't use the camera to convert analogue videos to digital format. There's a microphone port for connecting an external mic, but you'll have to either hold it in your hand or buy a bracket, since there's no accessory shoe on which to mount it.
Performance
Though the Panasonic NVGS35B's extreme lens reach must have presented some engineering challenges, the camera performs well throughout its zoom range. The large zoom rocker is easy to operate and to control precisely. Image stabilisation is a must at extreme zoom ranges and the NVGS35B's electronic image stabilisation (EIS) does an excellent job of dampening hand movements. At extreme zoom ranges, though, the EIS creates an odd effect: instead of seeming to wobble slightly, as is typical, the image makes sudden, small shifts.
We generally found autofocus accurate, but we sometimes saw a noticeable blurring as the camera got its bearings after panning.

The smallish 64mm (2.5-inch) LCD washes out in direct sunlight; you'll want to use the viewfinder in bright conditions. Neither display is particularly detailed, making precise manual focusing somewhat difficult.
The stereo microphone works well, though the left and right pickups are so close they always record identical sound. The microphone also has a zoom feature: as you zoom the lens, the microphone's sensitivity increases to pick up more distant sounds.
Image quality
The Panasonic NVGS35B's video quality is good, but not exemplary. The footage we shot was sharper and more detailed than we'd expect from a camera with a single 680,000-pixel CCD. We found colour and saturation very accurate. The automatic white balance was quick to adjust to changing lighting conditions and never let us down during our testing.
In bright light, footage was crisp and sharp. In dimmer indoor conditions, the image picked up the visual noise typical in lower-end consumer camcorders. The NVGS35B's included video light wasn't a lot of help here. It has a very short range and is mostly useful for illuminating very close subjects.
Footage shot at extreme zoom showed an odd shifting effect due to the electronic image stabilisation. Objects didn't really move any more than with similar EIS systems on other cameras, but the sudden shifts were somewhat disconcerting compared to the more subtle wobble you typically see when using image stabilisation.
The Panasonic NVGS35B shoots stills at VGA resolution, so it's mostly useful for quick email snapshots. One slick feature is the ability to capture stills to the SD/MMC card while shooting video. Stills lacked detail, however, and indoor shots appeared grainy.
Edited by Aimee Baldridge
Additional editing by Nick Hide
Visit reviews.cnet.co.uk for in-depth reviews of many more products
