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 said:is there any info on how many pixels per second the digic 5+ can process?
any bandwith specs?
Malte_P said:all fine and correct but does not answer my question.
Mt Spokane Photography said:Its not specified.
Malte_P said:the shutter as limiting factor is what i guessed too.. but i would like confirmation.
neuroanatomist said: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.
Malte_P said:could a dual digic 5+ powered camera deliver 10 FPS for a 21-24MP sensor?
Freelancer said:PackLight said: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?
tpatana said:Freelancer said:PackLight said: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.
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PackLight said:tpatana said:Freelancer said:PackLight said: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 said:PackLight said:tpatana said:Freelancer said:PackLight said: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 said:They apparently opted to get 2 more fps rather than offer a slightly larger sensor.
tpatana said: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.
PackLight said: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 said: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.
PackLight said:...Crop sensors were made smaller so the files would be smaller.
neuroanatomist said:PackLight said:...Crop sensors were made smaller so the files would be smaller.
Ahhh, so the crop sensor in my 7D will give me smaller files than the FF sensor in my 1D X? Hmmmmmm...that doesn't seem to be the case. :![]()
PackLight said:neuroanatomist said:PackLight said:...Crop sensors were made smaller so the files would be smaller.
Ahhh, so the crop sensor in my 7D will give me smaller files than the FF sensor in my 1D X? Hmmmmmm...that doesn't seem to be the case. :![]()
Sure not, but then the 7d isn't the first crop sensor is it? Amazing what a few years of crop evolution wil produce.![]()
You ask, and I told you its not specified. That means no specs. Apparently you are hoping someone will fabricate numbers for you?Malte_P said:Mt Spokane Photography said: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. .Malte_P said:is there any info on how many pixels per second the digic 5+ can process?
any bandwith specs?
![]()
all fine and correct but does not answer my question.
neuroanatomist said:PackLight said:neuroanatomist said:PackLight said:...Crop sensors were made smaller so the files would be smaller.
Ahhh, so the crop sensor in my 7D will give me smaller files than the FF sensor in my 1D X? Hmmmmmm...that doesn't seem to be the case. :![]()
Sure not, but then the 7d isn't the first crop sensor is it? Amazing what a few years of crop evolution wil produce.![]()
You seem to be intentionally missing the point. Sensor size is irrelevant for file size. Only MP count matters. APS-S crop sensors were made smaller not to produce smaller files, but to produce cheaper sensors - a 10-fold greater yield per wafer. APS-H was made because, at the time, that was the largest sensor that could be imaged in a single stepper pass during lithography. Canon has stated those rationales in white papers.