privatebydesign said:The original premise of the thread is the higher MP speculated on for a Canon EOS 135 format sensor, it was subsequently suggested that current APS-C sensors have similar, though lower, pixel densities to the rumours. This in turn led to the fact that even those crop camera pixel density 'resolution advantages' are practically impossible to realise in real world shooting except for a very few specific situations. As same generation crop and ff cameras use very similar technology and, very importantly, the same lenses, we can get real practical advance knowledge of what to expect from a next generation high MP sensor.
If one does actually compare same generation crop and cropped ff sensors when mitigating as many variables as possible, ie lenses, support, etc etc and use the optimal processing for both files I have never seen a set of comparison images that shows a marked crop camera resolution advantage (and I am far from alone). If somebody wants to point me to some then have at it, I am especially looking forward to a set of 5D MkIII and 7D MkII files.
That is the only relevant and practical comparison to make when trying to gauge what we might achieve with a 35-50MP 135 format sensor, especially considering it will be using those same EF lenses. Going off at tangents claiming all kinds of things that nobody disputes is just a smokescreen. Is an iPhone 'better' than a H5? Well it does resolve more per sensor area, nobody disputes that, but it doesn't use the same sensor tech or lenses and it can't take the same images, it is an irrelevant comparison.
Without wanting to wade into a row, and admitting I know very little about all this technical stuff, would a relevant study be to use the same lens on successively higher resolution sensors of the same size? The original 5D versus the 5D2, for instance. If you did it with enough resolutions, could you plot the increase in actually resolved detail, and make a prediction for as yet unreleased resolution sensors? I imagine the hypothesis is, the higher you go, the smaller the increase in actual resolution per extra megapixel?
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