tron said:
Mt Spokane Photography said:
We have met the enemy and he is us. Having to boost a photo 5 stops is not a sensor defect, something else is defective.
I just returned my camera for a similar reason. The defect showed in black only with -3 EV Exposure Compensation during exposure and boost in post. A similar 5D3 photo was MUCH better (with the known shadow problems in some very small completely dark (even after exposure) parts. It is not as if I use this way of shooting daily. I don't so I didn't discover it when I shot a low light indoor event but I need a camera that is a superset of my 5D3 (in blacks/DR etc) a few days per year when shooting moonrise behind a temple. If 5D3 does not have this issue I cannot see why 5D4 must have it. I would like to know your opinion when/if you get 5D4, check to see if it behaves similarly and keep it at the same time. By the way I didn't boost shadows. The problem was visible anyway!
There is no problem with realistic situations that show a malfunction and it certainly is valuable to have any malfunction exposed. However, the comment that you can test anything in such a way that it is caused to not perform acceptably, still applies.
Another comment about testing to destruction not being useful is probably not completely accurate either since I'm sure we could all come up with examples where destruction leads to deep soul searching and the discovery of things that would otherwise never be investigated.
Since nothing is perfect one might question whether one really wants to push their personal equipment to the
extreme limit to expose whatever shortcoming it has. If everyone does this and if there is actually no practical reason why the limit needs to be pushed, the net effect will be the company having to replace units at a higher rate, and costs ultimately being passed on to customers.
So, really what it comes down to is whether a person is being "picky" and where to draw the line. We all have different standards in this regard. It would be interesting to compare this scenario to the one of people picking up their new car and looking for paint defects or whatever. The pickiest person will always find defects in every car and yet sometimes those same folk have chips and scratches after a few weeks that would exceed any factory defects.
I'm not making any judgment on this particular camera issue relative to the OP but some comments in the thread have been over the top, which has resulted in responses that are not tolerant of the lack of clear judgment.
One thing for sure, when a response comes from someone, with the preface of having great expertise accumulated over many years, and that is used to
put down someone who has
demonstrated expertise over many years down, I know who I'll tend to believe.
Jack