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Get the best consumer-grade camcorder you can find. I tend to spend £600 (about $1000) on whatever is the top of the line Panasonic camcorder when I want to buy, and only have to upgrade occasionally. In the time Saturation Hall's been running we've gone from DV tape to Full-HD to 4k.
Get a really high quality memory card, and never take it out of the camera. Download your footage using a USB cable to your PC. With my current viseo camera, you can't actually "move" (as in copy and erase) from the camera, only copy, so when I copy the footage down, the version on the camera's memory card acts as my initial backup. Once everything is copied down, I can check that it's viewable and undamaged. Normally I wait until BackBlaze has backed it up to the cloud before I delete it from the camera, which I usually do at the start of the next filming day, rather than when the footage is copied. My current card allows 3 hours at 4k, which is plenty for a day's filming here. If the card seems to become "slow" (camera takes a while to start writting to it when you start a scene), take that as a sign to reformat it, still in the camera. before next use.
Get the best consumer-grade camcorder you can find. I tend to spend £600 (about $1000) on whatever is the top of the line Panasonic camcorder when I want to buy, and only have to upgrade occasionally. In the time Saturation Hall's been running we've gone from DV tape to Full-HD to 4k.
Get a really high quality memory card, and never take it out of the camera. Download your footage using a USB cable to your PC. With my current viseo camera, you can't actually "move" (as in copy and erase) from the camera, only copy, so when I copy the footage down, the version on the camera's memory card acts as my initial backup. Once everything is copied down, I can check that it's viewable and undamaged. Normally I wait until BackBlaze has backed it up to the cloud before I delete it from the camera, which I usually do at the start of the next filming day, rather than when the footage is copied. My current card allows 3 hours at 4k, which is plenty for a day's filming here. If the card seems to become "slow" (camera takes a while to start writting to it when you start a scene), take that as a sign to reformat it, still in the camera. before next use.



