Mikehit said:Khalai said:I've seen images at f/22, which appeared quite soft in comparison with f/11.
That's not what I am talking about and no-one i know doubts that diffraction occurs. I was referring to a low MP camera at f11/f16 vs a high MP camera at f11/f16.
M-S said he did not want a 150MP camera because even the 50DS has diffraction limit of f7.1 to f11. I was asking how a 150MP camera results in worse photographs at f11/f16.
I have not yet heard a landscape photographer say they would rather use the original 5D than the 5DIV, 5DS or 6D because their higher MP make diffraction worse. Or how about the Nikon D810 vs previous Nikon models.
Mikehit said:Khalai said:I've seen images at f/22, which appeared quite soft in comparison with f/11.
That's not what I am talking about and no-one i know doubts that diffraction occurs. I was referring to a low MP camera at f11/f16 vs a high MP camera at f11/f16.
M-S said he did not want a 150MP camera because even the 50DS has diffraction limit of f7.1 to f11. I was asking how a 150MP camera results in worse photographs at f11/f16.
I have not yet heard a landscape photographer say they would rather use the original 5D than the 5DIV, 5DS or 6D because their higher MP make diffraction worse. Or how about the Nikon D810 vs previous Nikon models.
M_S said:Flaws get magnified.
If you just make small prints you wont see the difference. A 120MP file would not improve on that, nor would a 50MP one; current 20MP files are fine as they are.
Yep, but when people start wanting the 7Diii to be 30+ MP (equivalent to 70+ on FF) these questions about diffraction are always going to occur and I recall them being raised when the 5DSR came out. And it is (to me) a classic case of theory vs practical application.But...this is a 7D Mark III thread...
Mikehit said:M_S said:Flaws get magnified.
If you just make small prints you wont see the difference. A 120MP file would not improve on that, nor would a 50MP one; current 20MP files are fine as they are.
That is sort of my question. An 8MP image blown up to 20" will be limited by out and out resolution
A 50MP, or 150MP camera will have vastly more resolution but will have an element of diffraction, but the greater resolution will always be obvious (and no-one has ever proven otherwise to me). In which case there is no downside to more pixels.
Yep, but when people start wanting the 7Diii to be 30+ MP (equivalent to 70+ on FF) these questions about diffraction are always going to occur and I recall them being raised when the 5DSR came out. And it is (to me) a classic case of theory vs practical application.But...this is a 7D Mark III thread...
M_S said:Mikehit said:Khalai said:I've seen images at f/22, which appeared quite soft in comparison with f/11.
That's not what I am talking about and no-one i know doubts that diffraction occurs. I was referring to a low MP camera at f11/f16 vs a high MP camera at f11/f16.
M-S said he did not want a 150MP camera because even the 50DS has diffraction limit of f7.1 to f11. I was asking how a 150MP camera results in worse photographs at f11/f16.
I have not yet heard a landscape photographer say they would rather use the original 5D than the 5DIV, 5DS or 6D because their higher MP make diffraction worse. Or how about the Nikon D810 vs previous Nikon models.
Depends on what you compare it to. If you compare a smaller MP pic to a larger MP pic at 100% view, then you will see it, drastically. If you want to crop, you will see it, as well dractically as before. If you don't crop and compare it to print, its a matter of how big you want to print. Flaws get magnified. If you just make small prints you wont see the difference. A 120MP file would not improve on that, nor would a 50MP one; current 20MP files are fine as they are. If you want to print bigger prints and retain the detail or get more detail out of it (small print for lesser MPs and larger prints for higher MPs), diffraction has to be taken into account and is in fact more visible.
But...this is a 7D Mark III thread...![]()
Khalai said:Well, in 7D III, you care less about DLA, because it's meant more as a sports/wildlife camera, where you usually want as fast aperture as possible (thus limiting DLA).
Exactly. I just tried to elaborate on the point. I get it, that one has some whiggle room when downsizing the pic in respect to noise and DLA, but that was not the main purpose I had in mind when getting me the high MP camera. And if you go for large prints, it is like it is, with all the ups and downs. On that sensor size, and from what I have seen so far, I would spend more time on other stuff than raising the bar yet another time. At least, thats my opinion for now.Khalai said:If you print small or do not heavily crop, then why would you need high resolution in the first place, right?![]()
Khalai said:Mikehit said:M_S said:rrcphoto said:7D Mark II in the first part of next year sets up the 120MP 5DsR Mark II for photokina![]()
Lets say it this way: 120MP 5dsr II would pose a huge problem and, at least with my skills, would pose a serious problem. Usable aperture is already limited to 7.1-11 because of diffraction and shutter speeds are doubled on the 5dsr to get a sharp picture. Going higher with the MPs would certainly worsen that.
I would leave it at 50 mps and better all the rest, then the 5dsr2 will be an excellent camera. And they should kick Adobe for not making a medium contrast curve a standard for that camera! Almost made me not buy that camera.
If the increase megapixels changes the diffraction limit, then of greater concern is camerashake.
IIRC, digital matched slide film for resolution at 6MP and it was in the days of film that they came up with the 1/focal length 'rule' for hand held shutter speed. So are you saying that with the 5DSR you have to use 1/3xFL ?
IHMO that 120 MPix is simply overkill. I've always considered FF sweet spot in 24-32 MPix region. After all with 34 MPix, you can print up to 16x24" in 300 dpi (4800 x7200 px). It's still not too many megapickles to be worried about diffraction (to a certain degree), you don't usually have to resort to higher SS to prevent motion blur and the file size is nothing scary about storage and editing.
Who want to store 120 MPix files anyway? Five CR2 files, which take up 1 GB of space? DLA around f/4? I think that impracticality of such sensor outweights about any potential advantage the increased resolution might bring.
Khalai said:Truth be told, I would be worried about 150 MPix FF sensor at f/11. With 150 MPix on FF, you'll getting DLA after f/4 and f/5.6 is already being affected (not by much of course). So f/11 or even worse, f/16 could lead to significant softness of the image. And I'm talking about rather medium sized print of 24" (60 cm) on the long edge.
Khalai said:If you print small or do not heavily crop, then why would you need high resolution in the first place, right?![]()
Mikehit said:scyrene said:A lot of people who'd like more resolution want it for the purposes of cropping, not printing huge.
They are the same thing
Khalai said:If you print small or do not heavily crop, then why would you need high resolution in the first place, right?![]()
scyrene said:Mikehit said:scyrene said:A lot of people who'd like more resolution want it for the purposes of cropping, not printing huge.
They are the same thing
I don't understand.
scyrene said:Mikehit said:scyrene said:A lot of people who'd like more resolution want it for the purposes of cropping, not printing huge.
They are the same thing
I don't understand.
Mikehit said:scyrene said:Mikehit said:scyrene said:A lot of people who'd like more resolution want it for the purposes of cropping, not printing huge.
They are the same thing
I don't understand.
A 5DSR is 9,000x6000 (for round numbers) and you crop it to 6,000 x4,000. Print that crop to 20x12 and it is the same as printing the original sensor image to 30x18 and cutting out a 20x12 portion of it.
jolyonralph said:Khalai said:If you print small or do not heavily crop, then why would you need high resolution in the first place, right?![]()
Downscaling.
Remember that a 24mpx sensor doesn't give you 24 colour megapixels. there are 12 megapixels of green, and 6 megapixels each of red and blue.
These are then interpolated to give you a pseudo-24 megapixel full colour image, bearing in mind every single one of those pixels is the product of assumption, taking the surrounding pixels to assume what the missing colour components would be.
So, even if you don't crop, or you don't print massive posters, the 5DSR gives you the opportunity of massive oversampling which allows you to scale down an image and get a much more accurate representation of both the luminosity and color of each actual pixel in your final image.
scyrene said:As for file sizes, that's one reasonable argument against higher res sensors (for now), although the cost of storage continues to drop as it has for decades.
9VIII said:scyrene said:As for file sizes, that's one reasonable argument against higher res sensors (for now), although the cost of storage continues to drop as it has for decades.
Actually there's a global shortage of Flash memory right now, and HDD's have been the same price since 2010 because everyone knows it's practically a dead technology, 10TB is probably the biggest mechanical Hard Drive that will ever be on the market (at least without using stripped recording which drastically reduces write performance).