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Vuze XR 5.7K 3D VR & 360 Camera - Black

  • Based on 310 reviews
Condition: Used - Very Good
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$1,875.00 Why this price?

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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by JP Street New&Used items

Arrives Apr 17 – May 2
Order within 1 hour and 44 minutes
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Size: Camera


Features

  • Shoot with Confidence Using in-App Video Stabilization
  • Record videos with the resolution of 5.7K@30 fps, 4K@60 fps and 4K@30 fps. Records as MP4 with H.264 encoder for enhanced image quality.
  • Take DNG and JPG photos at 18 MP resolution. Giving you the ability to professionally edit your photos after taking them, to achieve whatever result you desire.
  • With the touch of a button, the Vuze XR goes from a 360 camera to VR 180, giving you unique ways to explore more -- and tell your story bigger and better. Change the perspective and adjust it to your audience.
  • Easily create out-of-this-world content, ready to be shared live or edited to be enjoyed later. Control the camera via WiFi through a dedicated mobile app for both Android and iOS. Edit, add voice-over and effects. Reframe your video using Directors Cut tools.

Brand: Vuze


Connectivity Technology: Wi-Fi


Flash Memory Type: SD


Color: Black


Special Feature: 3D VR180° and 2D 360° Camera; In-Camera and Desktop Stitching


Photo Sensor Technology: CMOS


Camcorder type: Video Camera


Model Name: xr


Included Components: Battery


Video Capture Resolution: 5.7K


Brand Name: ‎Vuze


Item Weight: ‎7.5 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎1.54 x 2.2 x 5.98 inches


Item model number: ‎VUZE-XR-BLK


Batteries: ‎1 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Color Name: ‎Black


Special Features: ‎3D VR180° and 2D 360° Camera; In-Camera and Desktop Stitching


Date First Available: October 10, 2018


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Apr 17 – May 2

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Easiest 360/3D camera EVER! Especially for livestreaming!
Size: Camera
What an amazing camera! Very easy to use and set up and I thought the older 4K camera was easy to use. Being able to use the app (another big improvement over the previous version) to control the camera and go Live is seamless and easy. Just make sure the connection is a good one, because, 5K and all. I have been using it to show my son's volleyball tournaments and the footage is really amazing. About the setup... When you first unbox the camera and have charged it up, you'll have to have an SD card. You connect it to your phone via the app, then you have to change the wifi settings to allow it to also be connected to the internet to update and get the firmware. This is easily laid out on the VUZE website and is not hard at all. You download the firmware to install on the camera, easy to do, and can start shooting right away. Another nice feature is the preview for iOS devices. You can finally see what the camera sees. It's very easy to switch between 360 and 3D 180 modes (push a button on the camera) and footage is stored on the camera's SD card. You transfer the footage to your computer, the Humaneyes Software automatically opens and you can edit/render the footage. If you go Live, you have to have your YouTube account already set up for live broadcast. I haven't been able to get it set up for Facebook Live yet, although it says this is already in the app. I have only seen the YouTube button. Wish that would be easier because I would love to broadcast a Jiu Jitsu tournament on Facebook in a couple of weeks. Another big improvement is being able to plug it in for longer broadcasts! You're not just limited to battery power. You can set it up on a tripod, get it ready for broadcast and plug it in so it doesn't power off in an hour! Awesome! The camera is well built and very solid. You would think it would have a big bag of stuff and attachments but it is small and compact. Very easy to carry around and set up to use. I think I have more stuff for my tiny Action Camera than I do for the Vuze XR. Very happy with it and would definitely recommend to anyone who wants a quality camera with amazing capabilities! Love it! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2019 by Kelli Ternent

  • Versatile, adequate VR Camera
Size: Camera
I love immersive Virtual Reality (VR), and always wondered how the various travel and nature videos for VR are made. A medium-priced answer is this camera (the VUZE XR). I find it is a lot of fun to take it on trips, to be able to "relive" being at special locations. I also use it to record immersive videos of my grand kids. Two weeks ago, we made a puppet show with stuffed animals, and it is priceless! My grandson, nearly 12, said it was "weird" to look himself in the eyes in VR. I wonder what they are going to think of it when they grow up?! What I like: - It is relatively easy to use (once you get past the really terrible documentation - more about that below)! - It shoots both video and still pictures - It shoots in either 360-degree ("2D") or 180-degree ("3D") modes: In 360-deg mode, when you play back with a VR headset, you can look around freely in every direction, but both eyes get the same image (thus only 2D). In 180-deg mode, the camera shoots only what's in front of it, a hemisphere; but it records it as two separate images, one for each eye (thus true 3D, which can be even more impressive!) All modes are fully immersive, which means that when you view them with a headset (I use Oculus Quest), it seems as though you are actually present at the place where the images were taken. - It has 4-channels of sound, so the immersive video you record will also have immersive audio. Sounds, such as people talking or birds chirping, actually seem to come from the immersive world you have recorded. On playback, as you turn your head to look around in the virtual world, the sounds always come from the right place, greatly enhancing the 'reality' effect. - The smart-phone controller app that comes with the camera is very effective and easy-to-use, once you get it working, which is challenging. This app allows you to see roughly what you are recording in real time (NO VR, of course), to start and stop recording or take a still picture, to see camera status, and to control various settings on the camera. - The camera comes with a support program, which you must run on a desktop or laptop computer, which 'stitches' and 'renders' your pictures so you can play them (only required for highest resolution). Neutral comments: - When new, the internal lithium battery lasts about an hour on a full charge, but you can record while connected to a USB power bank to extend running time. The built-in battery is not removable, so battery longevity may be an issue. When you record with a power bank connected, don't forget that in a 360-degree recording, you can see everything, including the battery and connecting cable. - It DOES NOT come with the required micro format SD memory card, but a card is absolutely required to use the camera. I found that a 128 GB card can hold nearly 4 hours of video at the highest resolution. Don't forget to order one! Also, a cheap SD card may not work -- this camera really pushes bandwidth limits. Get a good memory card! - The camera actually gets hot when you record with it. If the shooting environment is too warm, the camera will overheat and shut down. You may have trouble in Death Valley (or the Pacific Northwest this past weekend)! - Resolution is at best mediocre, which means the recordings always look a bit 'soft'. Things that are close, within a few feet, are sharp enough, but anything more than a dozen feet away looks a bit fuzzy, For example, it is usually impossible to read signs in your recordings. The available camera resolution, which at its highest is 5760 x 2880 pixels ("5.7k"), is spread over the entire viewing area, which is either 360-deg (a full sphere) or 180-deg (a half sphere), so resolution in any part of the picture is limited. I recommend always using the highest available resolution! Color saturation and black level, for those of you who know photography, are quite difficult to get right, but there are settings in the smartphone app with which you can tinker. I'm still not completely happy with either. What I don't like: - The documentation is truly awful. I am a lifelong electronics and computer engineer, and this is some of the worst I have seen. At first it seems like it might be okay. Then it feels like the designers hired a ghost writer who didn't really understand what they were talking about. The designers knew how their camera is 'supposed' to work, but they don't seem to consider what the user /needs/ to know in order to make effective use of their product. For example, there is an Import and Render procedure that you must use to get recordings off the camera and prepare them for use, but that procedure is never outlined. The user is forced to guess which steps do what, and in what order, and to which files. All the recorded files have non-descriptive, mostly numerical, names. At least they have associated dates, if you have managed to connect the camera to the phone app before you use it. - The camera required a "firmware update" before it would operate, but there is no step-by-step description I could find for how to accomplish it. They ask you to do the update through your smartphone, but I found it was not clear how to connect the smartphone to both the internet and the camera at the same time, since the camera monopolizes the phone's WiFi. I ended up getting the internet via my cell service rather than my home internet, leaving the phone's WiFi free to connect to the camera. It was very, very slow (hours). And it could have been very expensive if I didn't have an unlimited data plan on my cellphone. Later I found there is a way to update using a cable (USB-C, included) from my laptop, but I could not find anything about it in the docs or on discussion forums. I would, for example, need to know what file(s) to download, from where, and where to put them into the file structure on the camera (or even that there /is/ a file structure accessible on the camera, and how to get to it!). Later I found out that most customers simply call customer support to get through all this (must be expensive for the company!), but I was doing it on a Saturday, which is the Sabbath, so they were not answering the phones. - Rendering is relatively slow, even on my game-ready Alienware laptop. - Getting your files into a VR headset and playing them immersively is also quite challenging. The camera documentation does not consider it to be their problem, so you are on your own. It took several days to get through all the hurdles to successfully play my shots on the Oculus. At first, they would only play as if they were on a virtual movie screen in the headset. Then they would play in VR, but in the wrong aspect ratio: everything looked grossly stretched horizontally. Finally, after several days, I was able to develop a 'ritual' that resulted in my shots creating a true VR experience. What I found on the Web is that every kind of headset or display device is different, and there are many 'hidden' features and bits of metadata (data in your shot files about how they are to be displayed), that all need to align correctly before you can achieve a remotely satisfactory VR result. - Processing multiple shots is very tedious and time consuming. The rendering program does not behave like most Windows programs; for example, most selections do not allow multi-select. I tend to take a lot of pictures. At a museum yesterday, for example, I took more than 150 still shots and several videos. The tool seems to require me to process each one individually. There is no automation I could find. Each file must be individually found in the file structure, without the benefit of preview or thumbnail, chosen, imported, have its settings made (one file at a time!!!), rendered, and copied. One. At. A. Time. It's excruciating. I can't even find a way to create a set of default settings to apply to all my files. I have to set each, one-by-one. Now that I have the camera and processing (mostly) working, I am glad to have it. But it's not something I would like to use professionally! Thus the four-star, and not five-star, rating. --Eric ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 9, 2021 by Avider

  • Picture quality makes up for all negative aspects
The media could not be loaded. 5 stars just because of picture quality at this price range. Best 180 vr under $1000. Good 360 as well, but others in this price range that do not do 180 may beat it in other aspects. The software included for download on the computer is very well done. Has all basic editing functions. Useing anti shake when rendering is a must every time if not on a tripod or gimbal. Avoiding even slightly fast movements should be done when filming as well if held just by hand. The bad: connecting the app on your phone to the camera takes a long time. Using the camera without your phone seems difficult with lack of extra indicator lights and no screen on the camera itself. I have never even tried without the phone app. FYI, the camera connects to an app on your phone. It uses wifi, but you can think of it like connecting via Bluetooth, because its wifi from the camera. You do not need wifi allready connected on your phone to connect. It just needs to be on. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2021 by Daniel T.

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