Premium 6 ft Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB HandyCam Mini HDMI cable! This type A to C digital cable supports 600Hz and all 1.3 standards.
CE (A Days Tech)


A Days Tech

List Price: $29.99

  • High quality 6ft HDMI cable
  • Original gapless structure provides protection.
  • Supports HD video formats: 720p, 1080i, 1080p, 1920p, 2160p, 3D.
  • HDMI high speed cable certified as 1.3c (36mbps)

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Premium 10 ft Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB HandyCam Mini HDMI cable! This type A to C digital cable supports 600Hz and all 1.3 standards.
CE (A Days Tech)


A Days Tech

List Price: $39.99

  • Original gapless structure provides protection.
  • High quality 10ft HDMI cable without ethernet.
  • Triple shielding rejects external noise & clutter.
  • HDMI high speed cable certified up to 1.4 (48Gbps) in bulk packaging.

Read more about Premium 10 ft Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB HandyCam Mini HDMI cable! This type A to C digital cable supports 600Hz and all 1.3 standards.


PROFESSIONAL 6 ft Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB HandyCam Mini HDMI to HDMI cable! (Up to 800HZ, 1.4, 1.3b, 1.3c, Type A to C)
CE (A Days Tech)


A Days Tech

List Price: $39.99

  • Original sealed gapless structure provides protection.
  • The ONLY Mini HDMI high speed cable certified as 1.4 (42gbps)
  • Supports HD video formats: 720p, 1080i, 1080p, 1440p, 1920p, 2160p, and 3D!
  • Triple shielding rejects external noise & clutter seen by other cables.

Read more about PROFESSIONAL 6 ft Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB HandyCam Mini HDMI to HDMI cable! (Up to 800HZ, 1.4, 1.3b, 1.3c, Type A to C)


Brad Paisley "Start A Band" Green Screen Challenge

on bradpaisley.com, and there'll be a grand prize winner who will win a Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB High Definition Handycam Camcorder and TEN ...

"whats the difference between the Sony HDR-SR10D 120GB HD and the Panasonic HVX200A?

im looking to get a good camcorder and im wondering what the major differences are between a professional camera and a high end camcorder.


The Sony HDR-SR10 is a consumer grade hard drive camcorder that saves high definition video to anemic AVCHD. While on the higher end of consumer-grade, the lenses and imaging chips are bigger than the entry-level consumer cams, but they are what they are - and low-light operations are not very good. It has the SmoothSlowRecord and SuperNightShot features that can be handy. It has a 1/8" (3.5mm) audio-in jack. Manual controls are challenging to get to when capturing video. Hard drive camcorders have problems with high altitude (anything over about 9,700 feet) and vibration. In both cases, the hard drive heads can park and you will not be able to record.

The Panasonic HVX200 is a pro-grade camcorder that records DV and HDV format to P2 cards and can transfer that information to a computer with a PCMCIA slot or to the camcorder's on-board miniDV tape. It has large lenses and imaging chips associated with pro cams and does well in low-light. It does 24p capture for a cinematic look - if you want it. The manual controls are easy to get to. The LCD panel - if you choose to use it - is a lot larger than the SR10's. Audio connections are made with pro-grade XLR connectors. Video-quality wise, this Panasonic will crush the Sony. You would be better off with a Sony HDR-HC9... and a closer comparison would be a Sony HVR-V1U or HVR-Z1U. MiniDV tape and flash memory camcorders do not have problems with high altitude or vibration.