Who believes they understand but doesn’t, probably never will.Who understands, understands. Who doesn't but can and wants to, will.
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Who believes they understand but doesn’t, probably never will.Who understands, understands. Who doesn't but can and wants to, will.
As @neuroanatomist has pointed out you are confusing looking at individual pixels rather than the actual image.
A simple illustration, for example, is that a square of 4 pixels each of 3x3 microns^2 has the same area as 1 pixel of 6x6 microns^2 and the 4 small combined have the same well depth as the single larger so images from both viewed at the same size are looking at he same well depth despite one sensor having 4x the number of pixels.
Viewing size is crucial to comparing the performance of cameras.
If you viewed the FF image at 1.6x1.6 the size of the APS-C image, then both images would appear to have the same DR and noise per unit area.
Who believes they understand but doesn’t, probably never will.
Please provide these measurements, I would be interested in seeing them for myself as I am interested in the data to support your statements. (this is not any sort of dig at you, I am genuinely interested in seeing your measurements and the environment you collected them in)
I'd be glad to but cannot at this point and form due to related project I'm working on. Perhaps with time.
Fascinating.I'd be glad to but cannot at this point and form due to related project I'm working on. Perhaps with time.
....
And 6 microns look like the best balance.
Therefore > 24Mp for 36mm for a flagship
In this corner, empirical data from a trusted, knowledgeable source showing no practical difference in DR between the 45 MP sensor of the R5 and the 24 MP sensor of the R3. Granted, that’s with a limited number of parameters measured…
And in this corner, “I have better measurements,” but I “cannot at this point” show them to you. So just trust me, I’m right.
I await the data (real data) and thoughtful discussion that together will supply genuine verification of the claims made here.
Until that time...I think I'll continue to check my emails for the R5MkII (hopefully) headed my way.![]()
I hear you about the 5DSR, which I use only for architecture with a tilt-shift lens. Since settings are controlled, I don't worry about ISO. It's just that unless I trade in my Canon and Fuji bodies, I won't be able to afford the SL3, which, at 60MP, should be able to handle architecture along with whatever else I throw at it except for sports. And even there, I don't shoot professionally and generally spray and pray with my 1DX3.Ohhhhh don’t sell the 5dsr. Man. That to me is one of canons best cameras. I have two and I love them. Might not have the best iso performance but every time I use that camera I am blown away.
Leica haters can can throw crap terms around to try to prove a point, but Leica claims that what it calls its "Triple Resolution Technology" produces raw image files in DNG format and JPEGs that can be recorded at 60, 36 or 18 megapixels, always using the full sensor area.LOL. Is it demosaiced? Is it downsampled? Then it’s not RAW. I can export a JPG file as a DNG, but that doesn’t reconstitute the raw image data.
It was posted already. Were you unable to see it, or did you just not comprehend it?Show me this "empirical DR data".
Trust is earned. Making statements that are counter to established information and not backing those claims up with data does not earn trust.No one here cares about tackling your trust issues.
I downloaded the low ISO RAWs for the R5II and R5, the exposures from their studio comparison tool are substantially different. It’s cute that you are suggesting use of an unreliable tool to support the conclusions you’ve drawn from ‘data not shown’.You could have clicked on dpreview hig iso raw examples and confirm a part of what I've said if you really wanted to but you didn't want to so see above about beliefs.
ISO 102400 is already a pushed RAW for the R5. The other three cameras have a top native ISO of 102400, the R5 tops out at 51200 so ISO 102400 is a 1-stop in-camera push.I am going to post a DPReview comparison of R5, R6, R3, 1DxIII at 102400 ISO. Yes I am aware that no one shoots at that ISO and that it's an edge case at the extremes, but I couldn't find any pushed RAWs for online comparison. You can still see a difference at 51200, but below that it's harder.
It was posted already. Were you unable to see it, or did you just not comprehend it?
I downloaded the low ISO RAWs for the R5II and R5,
Yes, a priceless failure in your understanding. Your logic applies to a single pixel, it does not apply to a sensor full of them. If it did, the 5DsR and 7DII would have similar noise and DR in their resulting images, because they are equivalent sensor generations and the pixels are essentially the same size.Priceless.
Yes, a priceless failure in your understanding.
Your logic applies to a single pixel, it does not apply to a sensor full of them.
Also, chart shows about 7 stops of DR at ISO 3200.
My definition of Photographic Dynamic Range is a low endpoint with an SNR of 20 when adjusted for the appropriate Circle Of Confusion (COC) for the sensor.
Recall that this value is normalized for the Circle Of Confusion (COC) that is appropriate for the sensor size.
PDR is the dynamic range you would expect in an 8x10" print viewed at a distance of about arms length.
FYI at least in ISO 100 the NR applied to the R5ii is very very weak (source: Bill himself in DPReview forums). According to him, the closer to a horizontal line the energy spectrum is, the less NR it has applied.Thanks for the heads up - they appeared today. The points for the R5ii are all downward pointing triangles, which means that noise reduction is being applied to raw throughout the whole iso range.
That's all you've been doing here so far. I'm glad you're going to stop....I'm not wasting time on fantasy land strawman nonsense.