May 24, 2013, 05:18:06 PM

Author Topic: 1D X FPS limiting factor?  (Read 4318 times)

Malte_P

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 90
    • View Profile
1D X FPS limiting factor?
« on: December 28, 2012, 04:15:38 PM »
what is limiting the maximum FPS for the 1D X?

is it the bandwith/processing power of the DIGIC5+ CPU´s?

or is it the mechanical shutter construction?

could a dual digic 5+ powered camera deliver 10 FPS for a 21-24MP sensor?

canon rumors FORUM

1D X FPS limiting factor?
« on: December 28, 2012, 04:15:38 PM »

neuroanatomist

  • 1D X
  • *******
  • Posts: 8665
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #1 on: December 28, 2012, 04:41:46 PM »
The shutter limits it to 12 fps, the dual Digic 5+ apparently limits it to 14 fps, but it's possible that's a card writing limitation.
EOS 1D X, EOS 7D, and lots of lenses
_____________________________
Flickr | TDP Profile/Gear List

Malte_P

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 90
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #2 on: December 28, 2012, 05:33:25 PM »
is there any info on how many pixels per second the digic 5+ can process?
any bandwith specs?

Mt Spokane Photography

  • 1D X
  • *******
  • Posts: 5834
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #3 on: December 28, 2012, 05:41:27 PM »
is there any info on how many pixels per second the digic 5+ can process?
any bandwith specs?
Its not specified.  However, many things tend to be limiting, the shutter speed, the card speed, the processing speed.  In a good design, they all tend to be reasonably close in capability.  For example, a faster processor would eat up battery life and give no benefit, a faster shutter would not help if the processor was incapable of faster speeds, and none of this would matter if Card and internal memory speeds were not fast enough.  It is likely that mechanical limitations (Shutter, Autofocus / lens speed) come into play earliest.

Malte_P

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 90
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #4 on: December 28, 2012, 06:00:20 PM »
is there any info on how many pixels per second the digic 5+ can process?
any bandwith specs?
Its not specified.  However, many things tend to be limiting, the shutter speed, the card speed, the processing speed.  In a good design, they all tend to be reasonably close in capability.  For example, a faster processor would eat up battery life and give no benefit, a faster shutter would not help if the processor was incapable of faster speeds, and none of this would matter if Card and internal memory speeds were not fast enough.  .

;)

all fine and correct but does not answer my question.


Quote
It is likely that mechanical limitations (Shutter, Autofocus / lens speed) come into play earliest


the shutter as limiting factor is what i guessed too.. but i would like confirmation. :)

and it would be interesting to know if a rumored 7D MK2 with 21-24 MP and 10 FPS could use dual digic 5+ or if it needs a new digic cpu for that.

normaly i would say 18MP x 14 FPS = 252 MP/s from the 1D X would be enough for the rumored 7D MK2.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2012, 06:05:28 PM by Malte_P »

neuroanatomist

  • 1D X
  • *******
  • Posts: 8665
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #5 on: December 28, 2012, 06:52:07 PM »
all fine and correct but does not answer my question.

Well, this:

Its not specified.

...seems like a pretty succinct and accurate answer, to me.  Digic 5+ is relatively spec'd as 17-times faster than Digic 4, but since there aren't absolute specs for the latter, that's fairly useless.

the shutter as limiting factor is what i guessed too.. but i would like confirmation.

As I stated above, the 1D X can shoot 12 fps normally, but 14 fps with the mirror locked up. Since 14 fps mode requires JPG and doesn't support RAW, I infer that card writing may be a limiting factor.
EOS 1D X, EOS 7D, and lots of lenses
_____________________________
Flickr | TDP Profile/Gear List

tpatana

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 84
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #6 on: December 28, 2012, 07:06:28 PM »
As I stated above, the 1D X can shoot 12 fps normally, but 14 fps with the mirror locked up. Since 14 fps mode requires JPG and doesn't support RAW, I infer that card writing may be a limiting factor.

At that speed it's mostly writing to buffer, and just trying to empty to card as fast as possible. So card speed is not the limiting, but buffer memory speed could be.

My bet would be one of the data-lines, so sensor -> digic, or digic -> buffer (or is the buffer between sensor and digic? I haven't seen block diagram). 18MP x 12fps is plenty of data to haul across a data-line.

canon rumors FORUM

Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #6 on: December 28, 2012, 07:06:28 PM »

PackLight

  • Guest
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #7 on: December 28, 2012, 07:22:54 PM »
Is this not answered in Canons 1D X white paper;

"A full-frame, 18 Megapixel sensor shooting at 14 frames per second produces a large signal stream that needs to be removed from the sensor rapidly. To enable this, the EOS-1D X uses a 16-channel high-speed output with two-vertical-pixel simultaneous readout. It is around 1.4 times faster than the readout system found in the EOS-1D Mark IV and it's this that allows the 14 frames per second shooting speed — a first for a camera with a 35mm full-frame digital sensor. Note that at ISO 32,000 or higher the frame rate will be reduced to 10fps (which still equals the fastest shooting rate of the EOS-1D Mark IV)."

PackLight

  • Guest
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #8 on: December 28, 2012, 07:32:11 PM »

could a dual digic 5+ powered camera deliver 10 FPS for a 21-24MP sensor?

I am going to speculate not yet.

The reason the 1D IV exists, is that the high speeds couldn't be obtained because of processing power. Processing power and frame rate is why we have crop sensors at all.

I bet the reason the 1D X has an 18mp sensor is that it couldn't have kept up with a 24mp sensor.

tpatana

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 84
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #9 on: December 28, 2012, 07:44:15 PM »

Processing power and frame rate is why we have crop sensors at all.



how is an aps-c sensor reducing the bandwith?

21 mp from a fullframe or 21 mp from a aps-c .... where is the difference in bandwith or needed processing power?

Smaller pixels = smaller amount of data, of course.

 ;)

PackLight

  • Guest
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #10 on: December 28, 2012, 07:49:18 PM »

Processing power and frame rate is why we have crop sensors at all.



how is an aps-c sensor reducing the bandwith?

21 mp from a fullframe or 21 mp from a aps-c .... where is the difference in bandwith or needed processing power?

Smaller pixels = smaller amount of data, of course.

 ;)


Which makes smaller RAW files, which take less time to process.

There was an old article I read a while back, put out by Canon explaining why we have crop sensors at all.  From memory the whole reason was file size and processor performance at the time. Cheaper sensor cost and other things were not an issue initially.

tpatana

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 84
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #11 on: December 28, 2012, 08:04:37 PM »

Processing power and frame rate is why we have crop sensors at all.



how is an aps-c sensor reducing the bandwith?

21 mp from a fullframe or 21 mp from a aps-c .... where is the difference in bandwith or needed processing power?

Smaller pixels = smaller amount of data, of course.

 ;)


Which makes smaller RAW files, which take less time to process.

There was an old article I read a while back, put out by Canon explaining why we have crop sensors at all.  From memory the whole reason was file size and processor performance at the time. Cheaper sensor cost and other things were not an issue initially.

Um, what?

I guess you missed my last line there.

21mp from crop = 21mp from ff

the actual data don't care of the sensor dimensions, it only cares about the number of pixels (and some other crap, but not the sensor size).

So I think you've either mis-read, or remember only parts of the explanation. E.g. for same pixel density, FF would yield more data thus needing more processing power. But for same MP count, it's the same between crop and ff.

I don't know if yield makes the difference between ff and crop, I know in ICs the big components get much lower yield.

PackLight

  • Guest
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #12 on: December 28, 2012, 08:12:49 PM »

Processing power and frame rate is why we have crop sensors at all.



how is an aps-c sensor reducing the bandwith?

21 mp from a fullframe or 21 mp from a aps-c .... where is the difference in bandwith or needed processing power?

Smaller pixels = smaller amount of data, of course.

 ;)


Which makes smaller RAW files, which take less time to process.

There was an old article I read a while back, put out by Canon explaining why we have crop sensors at all.  From memory the whole reason was file size and processor performance at the time. Cheaper sensor cost and other things were not an issue initially.

Um, what?

I guess you missed my last line there.

21mp from crop = 21mp from ff

the actual data don't care of the sensor dimensions, it only cares about the number of pixels (and some other crap, but not the sensor size).

So I think you've either mis-read, or remember only parts of the explanation. E.g. for same pixel density, FF would yield more data thus needing more processing power. But for same MP count, it's the same between crop and ff.

I don't know if yield makes the difference between ff and crop, I know in ICs the big components get much lower yield.

Yes, but what does it matter. If you are making the point that the 1D X could have used a larger sensor it probably could have and gotten 10fps vs 12fps.

The 1D X normal RAW file is about 23mb, the 1D IV's is 22mb. However the 5D II's is 25.8mb.  They apparently opted to get 2 more fps rather than offer a slightly larger sensor.
Still I think the limiting factor here is the processors.

It could be said that it is mechanically limited. But there were cameras shooting a high mechanical frame rate for years. Processors are catching up now.

And you can get a higher frame rate: Enter the 1D C.....
« Last Edit: December 28, 2012, 08:30:50 PM by PackLight »

tpatana

  • PowerShot G1 X
  • ***
  • Posts: 84
    • View Profile
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #13 on: December 28, 2012, 08:31:26 PM »


Ok, now I have no idea what you're saying.

But it seems you still didn't understand that the sensor size, crop or not, does _not_ affect the file size, thus it doesn't affect the processing power required.

They apparently opted to get 2 more fps rather than offer a slightly larger sensor.

Sensor size itself has nothing to do with the fps.

PackLight

  • Guest
Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #14 on: December 28, 2012, 08:45:34 PM »


Ok, now I have no idea what you're saying.

But it seems you still didn't understand that the sensor size, crop or not, does _not_ affect the file size, thus it doesn't affect the processing power required.

They apparently opted to get 2 more fps rather than offer a slightly larger sensor.


Sensor size itself has nothing to do with the fps.


Slightly larger in this statement meaning a 21mp sensor rather than the 18mp they used. A 21mp sensor file wouldn't have written as fast.


http://cpn.canon-europe.com/content/education/technical/eos_1d_x_explained.do

canon rumors FORUM

Re: 1D X FPS limiting factor?
« Reply #14 on: December 28, 2012, 08:45:34 PM »