tron said:
scyrene said:
tron said:
scyrene said:
It's good to like the kit one uses, but is there really much of a difference? Has anyone posted good evidence that removing the AA filter adds much appreciable sharpness? I hear these rather hyperbolic statements and demands on the subject, but reasoned comment has suggested that appropriate sharpening can all but cancel out the difference between e.g. the 5Ds and 5DsR - does anyone have anything definitive on this? Is it just a marketing gimmick that people have bought into?
I do not think so. AlanF who uses 5DsR for birding a lot said that the lack of AA filter reduces the need for sharpening thus keeping the noise lower.
I know, and while I respect photographers' opinions, that's not the same as presenting evidence. Is it even possible to quantify sharpness?
1. Preferring the results.
2. Comparing with Canon DPP's by using the sharpness slider.
And/Or you can ask Alan (2 entries above)
I don't like bothering people

Anyway, preference is not quantification, right? We all have preferences, that doesn't make them objectively better.
I've personally never felt the AA filter had a negative effect on my pictures, but then it's hard to know without using a camera without. I just don't get how some people can claim it's a make or break thing - and that AA filters are definitely terrible and ruining their photos and any camera released with one is crippled, as some people around the place have done at times. Or to quote the OP "[t]he effective removal of the AA filter has made a
huge difference in the sharpness in the photos I get from the 5Dsr".
The only side-by-side comparison I've seen is the dpreview test scene, and I can't see a big difference. The 5DsR is a little sharper, but it doesn't seem to be resolving much more detail, if any, and upping the sharpening on the 5Ds file would cancel out most of the difference, by the look of it.