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2009 Winter Buyer's Guide
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December 16, 2008 RSS


outdoor gear question
Which digital camcorder is tough enough for mountaineering?

outdoor gear question
outdoor equipment
Vixia HG20 AVCHD 60G Camcorder (courtesy, Canon)
I’m attempting to summit Aconcagua, over 22,000 feet and known to be very cold and windy. Which camcorder can I safely use at this altitude?

— Brendan
Chicago, Illinois


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There really aren’t “cold weather” cameras out there. And there never have been. I mean, think about it, on a regular basis I run into Jim Whittaker, the first American up Everest in 1963. Pictures of that trip were taken with a plain ol’ 35mm camera. You can look way back to when Scott stood at the South Pole, beaten by Amundsen, and took that remarkable self-portrait of a group of defeated, doomed men. And it was, what, -30F?

That said, if you were going somewhere cold, it used to be that you took your Nikon F or your Hanimex Super 8 into the camera shop, where small, quiet men hunched over spotlighted workbenches covered in thousands of camera parts, and they would do some magic with polar bear grease or whatever and make your camera cold-adapted. But these days cameras have seemingly no moving parts; they are all solid state. So what to do?

Think this way: Forget the camera. It’s all about the batteries. Cold makes the little electrons slow…way…..down. And slow electrons don’t give it up when you want to take a picture. So you need to do two things. One, pack spare batteries. Probably two in addition to the one in the camera. And two, keep the batteries that aren’t in your camera as close to your body as possible. Camera doesn’t want to work? It’s electrical. It’s cold. Pull out a spare warm battery and you are good to go for two or three hours.

Not that you leave the camera entirely on its own. Keep it in a pocket or inside your zipper, too. It’ll keep the battery inside warmer and prevent frost on the lens. So what camera? There are lots of good ones out there. If it was me, I’d take a Canon Vixia HG20 AVCHD 60G camcorder. It’s compact, high-def, and about $600 or so street price. You’ll be golden.

The 2009 Winter Outside Buyer’s Guide is now online so you can get prepped for gift-giving season—even if everything you pick is for yourself!




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Check out the bio of Douglas Gantenbein, aka the Gear Guy.

Readers' Mailbag: The Gear Guy digs into some of your more bizarre, obscure (and let’s face it, downright weird) posts from years gone by to see if he can make sense of it all, or if it’s just time to run up the white flag. Previous column: Beat the Cost of Gear.

The Gear Guy reports from the 2005 Outdoor Retailer summer trade fair, with his rundown of ten products to watch in 2006, plus the inside scoop on what shook down at the bi-annual gearapalooza.


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