It showcased several new cameras at NAB 2026, including the 3x speed LDX 110 for affordable slow-motion capture and the compact LDX C180 cinematic camera

At NAB 2026, Grass Valley showcased several new cameras, including the triple speed LDX 110. Ronny Van Geel, director product marketing, Grass Valley describes it as a “very affordable way to get slow mo”. It’s an entry-level model in the LDX range offering 3x speed UHD captures, and is aimed at lower tier sports.
Grass Valley also unveiled the LDX C180 (pictured), a small form factor version of its LDX 180 cinematic systems camera. Like the 180, the C180 is capable of capturing filmic imagery at sporting and other live events. It has a much smaller form factor so can get closer to the action, with the same internals as the 180 and has comparable image quality.
Van Geel told Broadcast Tech that the 180, which has been on the market for around 4 months now, has been selling across a range of genres, including drama, sports and concerts.
Grass Valley also used NAB to launch an AI slow-mo tool within its Replay products called FlowMotion, which works on both live and archive content, turning standard speed footage into high quality slow-mo clips.
Throughout its presence at NAB, the company emphasised its inniative AMP, as well as its Alliance Partners, both of which are aimed at ensuring products from different manufacturers can work more seamlessly alongside each other. It showcased several setups providing solutions for different user cases in sports and news production, all of which included a range of products from different manufacturers working in unison.
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