Yes I do shoot raw and use DXO PL8 when I bought it I was hoping the two sensors would improve low light performance, but my R5, is better in low light, I feel. I'm not very good on the specs and tech stuff, but was really hoping there may be some way of improving this, I shoot a lot of owls, and it would really help.
Pete,
"I shoot a lot of owls" ... yes, owls are particularly challenging because we are often shooting under the trees and even into
perches which are dark. Add that it is a heavily overcast day and any camera you have in your hands is going to be more
than a little bit challenged to get any image at all. Take a monopod/tripod and slow the shutter way down? Come to Skagit
County and shoot the Short-eared Owls in full sun in the daytime? Resign your self to the -fact- that you are going to
have to wait/hope for better light? Spend mega-bucks on a super fast long lens? Gimbal?
The number of megapixels is a will-o-the-wisp - we're never going to have enough. Even when there are enough
mega-pixels there is the 'physics thing' (signal to noise ratio) that takes over in very low light. Higher density sensors is
also not the answer (same physics about signal to noise). Stacked sensor helps - in terms of readout speed. Most pro
photographers are not dealing with the kind of light you are talking about for owls ... and a lot of what Canon (whoever)
produces/does research for is driven by the needs of the pros shooting stuff like sporting events (when are we going to
see a "birds" profile? never?).
I'm no pro - and don't have enough lifetime left to ever approach that level. So what I do is to accept what the
limitations of myself and my gear and attempt to not chase the 'better gear' thing (I'm not very good at that - the
R5M2 is my 3rd birding cam in under 5 years). Good luck and happy birding. - Jim in the PNW