V8 Beasts photos look really good. Simple, he's knows how to use his equipment within its limitations and, despite the outdoor environment, can often use fill light to compress dynamic range to where his camera can record a dynamic looking image without having to push the dark areas very far in post. That's what pro photographers do when they can. Those are great images for the purpose intended.
LetTheRightLensIn continues to drive home the same point a few of us have legitimate complaints about, Canon's overall DR is pith-poor at low ISO and hasn't improved much since they first came out with their CMOS sensors. And I'm in total agreement with this.
Not many people take photos of landscapes or other scenes with high DR and then try to recover and represent those extreme dark or bright details in a finished image.
Some of those who do photograph such high DR scenes do so without trying to retain those extreme details, that's their creative choice.
For those of us who want to retain and display that detail, Canon SLRs are, unfortunately, a poor choice, as I've painfully become aware of in the past few years after investing a lot of time, effort and $ into their product. At the time I was getting into Canon gear, Nikon was still not offering anything more compelling.
Things have certainly changed a lot in the past few years!
Prior to the Exmor sensors arrival, and their impressive DR ability, we had to rely on EV bracketed shots and combine them in post to try achieve what SHOULD have been possible in the first place with one well-exposed 14 bit raw file.
LetTheRightLensIn is correct in pointing out that this should not be necessary when the system works as it should to provide us with more dynamic range, which includes clean shadow areas we can bring up in post as much as needed.
That you two are still arguing around this point puzzles me greatly. You both have valid arguments and understand the limitations of the equipment. From my point of view, you both are in agreement, even if it's from different perspectives.
Like LetTheRightLensIn, I'm disappointed the 5D3 offers minimal improvement in this one area we're hoping it would have; low iso DR.
Like V8 Beast, I'm happy Canon addressed many of the other shortcomings of the 5D/5D2 in this latest camera. The 5D3 is now a better tool than the 5D2 and I'm sure it will help a lot of photographers make better images in more varied conditions than ever before.
The 5D3 won't do ME any good tho.
Perched on a tripod, carefully manually focused, mirror locked up and manually metered for optimal capture of dynamic range, the 5D3 gives me no more than the 5D2 could. All I would get from buying the 5D3 is a light feeling in my wallet.
OTOH, if I put that money into a D800 to sit on that tripod, I'm likely to be rewarded with a flat-looking raw image that I can massage in post to bring out tonality and detail that 5D? cannot ever achieve without the dark areas having patterns added to them by the confounded noise it continues to suffer from.
I have some shots from my 7D that I cannot use, due to shadow noise, because this low-iso pattern noise shows up in darker areas of the image even with only +17 fill-light being applied in LR3! That's pretty pathetic when I can take a similar image shot with a $650 Nikon D5100 and push it 4 or 5 stops and still not see any pattern noise!
I wish I had a FF Canon body that performed like that cheap little Nikon for low ISO IQ!
If V8 Beast had such a camera, he could simplify his shooting by being able to leave some of those reflectors in the van.

If LTRLI has such a camera, he wouldn't have to spend as much time as he does on this board writing about it.
And I would spend less time on this site reading about it. Oh, wait. I have the D5100! I'm going to go use it!
