HDV vs. DV: Exporting to DVD process???

Couple of questions here. I dont have too much experience exporting to a DVD.
1) Current equipment is a Canon GL2 with Final Cut HD. I created a 10 min video project with captures using the DV ntsc presets- 720 x 480. Compiled the clips and exported using 4:3 aspect DV 640 x 480 quicktime movie. Created a DVD using DVDStudio. Played it on a DVD player and the picture was a bit pixalated. Am i doing something wrong? Can i export to a higher resolution prior to making a DVD?
I want to make a decent quality SD DVD, do i have the right equipment- it being the Canon GL2 DV camera?
Leads me to my second issue.
2) I mentioned for the time being all i need i a very good quality SD DVD. Do i need to go with an HDV Camera? Or will the quality with using an HDV camera down to an SD DVD be the same or similar to what a DV camera can produce?
I hope this isnt asking for too much, but i tried to do a little research on my own but there are too many information floating around and its getting a little too confusing.
Any help wil be greatly appreciated!!
Jay

Export to Quicktime Movie simply maintains whatever settings you have in your sequence
If you are working with SD DV tapes (that is, regular mini-DV/DVCam) you would be using an Easy Setup of DV NTSC ... or DV NTSC 32 K if you recorded your tapes at the 12 bit audio rate. Since SD video is 720x480, then that is what you get. Exporting as Quicktime Movie gives you exactly that ... if you are going to compress for DVD, then that is what you want. You don't need ... or don't want ... any further compression.
The only caveat to this is, if you are using DVD Studio Pro you may want to use Compressor to give you some more MPEG-2 options, like adjusting endcoding options to help fit more footage onto a DVD or encoding the audio as AC-3. But you should start exporting as QT movie. You can drop that straight into DVD Studio and encode from there; if you use Compressor you drop the QT movie into that

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