DR from 5Ds will be 2 stop better then 7D mk II

privatebydesign said:
PureClassA said:
JRista gave us a nice long detailed explanation how DR works, said given what we know now, he doesn't see how it could be improved that much. Then he said "I hope I'm wrong" Not sure how you could be more scientific and fair minded than that.

Stu_bert said:
Jon is basing his reasoning on what he knows of current sensors and forming a conclusion. He does not profess to know, he's just interpreting information based on facts and science. I also personally find it useful and helpful, so thank you Jon.

No, he gave us his uninformed opinion of sensor tech coming from an informal 'education' about such technical matters garnered from the internet, forums, patents and other such self taught sources.

He has made several mistakes in his theories before and has often faltered in his knowledge when confronted by somebody with more experience in one particular area, he has no formal education on cameras or their tech.

His opinion is not fact, it is opinion, he usually muddies the two and too many here seem to take his word as gospel, it isn't.

Ouch. Seriously? You're going to mince my own words? I'm not saying he is correct. He is informed based on what he has read about how you measure or calculate DR, based on the DR of the 7D II and the information we have on the 5Ds. He's not stating it as fact - the facts are around the current sensor tech.

He, nor I, not PureClassA are attacking Canon nor you personally. Please stop the personal attack. If he's made mistakes before, gosh I'm sure so have many others on here. Let's keep the focus on what this thread is about, which is whether the 5Ds will be 2 stops better. If you disagree with the formula he used or his interpretation of current sensor data, then share it and I will happily admit that your interpretation is also good and useful.

But let's please avoid comments about whether he is human or not. We all are.
 
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privatebydesign said:
His opinion is not fact, it is opinion, he usually muddies the two and too many here seem to take his word as gospel, it isn't.

Muhahaha, what would be CR without the regular heavyweights going at each other, you could copy/paste a script for a soap opera from it :->

51spnievlel-_sx500_1.jpeg
 
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Marsu42 said:
privatebydesign said:
His opinion is not fact, it is opinion, he usually muddies the two and too many here seem to take his word as gospel, it isn't.

Muhahaha, what would be CR without the regular heavyweights going at each other, you could copy/paste a script for a soap opera from it :->

51spnievlel-_sx500_1.jpeg

lol, except I would guess that most people would prefer these forums without the soap opera, but maybe i'm in the minority...
 
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Stu_bert said:
lol, except I would guess that most people would prefer these forums without the soap opera, but maybe i'm in the minority...

Personally, I do find some entertainment value in it :-) ... and even fierce flaming on CR is nowhere near the *standard* conversational tone on tech forums, mailing list and bugtrackers. Photogs have to have some residual connection to reality, while coder nerds and similar can really sink the rock bottom of social soft skills :-\
 
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K said:
On the topic of Dynamic Range --

If it does turn out that the 5DS has higher dynamic range - then this will be a major blow to the forum-reputation of all the sensor experts in here who have completely committed themselves to the claim the 5DS will not have higher dynamic range via their dozens of long technical essay posts. They will be completely discredited if the results show higher DR.
[snip]

Uh, naw. People are making predictions based on... well, no real technical data. Really, it's little more than marginally-informed guessing, and guessing wrong is no more shameful than guessing right is laudable.
 
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Marsu42 said:
Stu_bert said:
lol, except I would guess that most people would prefer these forums without the soap opera, but maybe i'm in the minority...

Personally, I do find some entertainment value in it :-) ... and even fierce flaming on CR is nowhere near the *standard* conversational tone on tech forums, mailing list and bugtrackers. Photogs have to have some residual connection to reality, while coder nerds and similar can really sink the rock bottom of social soft skills :-\

thanks for the safety tip ;)

I work with infra techs, and they certainly call it as they see it. But it's not normally aimed at individuals personally. I believe the Dutch are a lot more direct (but the ones I've dealt with are really good), as are perhaps the Germans (same experience for me)...

Not big enough sample size to judge Aussies :D
 
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3kramd5 said:
K said:
On the topic of Dynamic Range --

If it does turn out that the 5DS has higher dynamic range - then this will be a major blow to the forum-reputation of all the sensor experts in here who have completely committed themselves to the claim the 5DS will not have higher dynamic range via their dozens of long technical essay posts. They will be completely discredited if the results show higher DR.
[snip]

Uh, naw. People are making predictions based on... well, no real technical data. Really, it's little more than marginally-informed guessing, and guessing wrong is no more shameful than guessing right is laudable.

+1
 
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Stu_bert said:
privatebydesign said:
PureClassA said:
JRista gave us a nice long detailed explanation how DR works, said given what we know now, he doesn't see how it could be improved that much. Then he said "I hope I'm wrong" Not sure how you could be more scientific and fair minded than that.

Stu_bert said:
Jon is basing his reasoning on what he knows of current sensors and forming a conclusion. He does not profess to know, he's just interpreting information based on facts and science. I also personally find it useful and helpful, so thank you Jon.

No, he gave us his uninformed opinion of sensor tech coming from an informal 'education' about such technical matters garnered from the internet, forums, patents and other such self taught sources.

He has made several mistakes in his theories before and has often faltered in his knowledge when confronted by somebody with more experience in one particular area, he has no formal education on cameras or their tech.

His opinion is not fact, it is opinion, he usually muddies the two and too many here seem to take his word as gospel, it isn't.

Ouch. Seriously? You're going to mince my own words? I'm not saying he is correct. He is informed based on what he has read about how you measure or calculate DR, based on the DR of the 7D II and the information we have on the 5Ds. He's not stating it as fact - the facts are around the current sensor tech.

He, nor I, not PureClassA are attacking Canon nor you personally. Please stop the personal attack. If he's made mistakes before, gosh I'm sure so have many others on here. Let's keep the focus on what this thread is about, which is whether the 5Ds will be 2 stops better. If you disagree with the formula he used or his interpretation of current sensor data, then share it and I will happily admit that your interpretation is also good and useful.

But let's please avoid comments about whether he is human or not. We all are.

We don't have any factual information on which to base any objective measure of the output of the 5DS/R, none, not a word, or measurement.


Oh yes he is.


jrista said:
I'm not talking about my own personal subjective perceptions of how I "feel" when I see a Canon image or a Nikon image. Again, this is simple, objective, mathematical stuff here. Cold, hard facts...not feelings.

Do you see the disconnect there? At this point in time we know nothing, we are just speculating on what Canon reps have said and to tell the truth what Mike Burnhill of Canon CPS in the UK said, "but there's a much lower noise floor, so therefore more ability to pull out detail in the shadows and highlights", really is unequivocal.

All I know is I don't know and nobody here does either. I also know and have seen the video of the Canon rep saying the shadow detail is better. How they did it, if they have, will be interesting in a purely academic way, but nobody here has a clue if they have or how.

Proclaiming your post is "Cold, hard facts...not feelings." does not make it so. I would be doing my 3,000+ posts and the forum in general a disservice if I did not point that out, especially when we have follow up posters saying "He's not stating it as fact"!
 
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Ugh. Dead Horse. Beat it more.

Deep breaths everyone. Math is math. But Canon has done "something" here. We don't know what for sure yet, and we don't know why we don't know.

All we do know is that a reputable source has passed along info given to him by those testing this new camera, yet to be seen. And those test are showing "X".

Thankfully I haven't lost my touch with reality. My day job is meeting and working with people face to face and often having tear apart detailed tax returns, financial data, investment portfolios, etc.. and in so doing, I HAVE to read between the lines. That's all I've done here with Westfall, Burnhill, and now this interesting stuff from Northlight. That's all any of us should be doing at this point.

Jon is trying to figure out where the improvement is. He doesn't see it yet, but knows we don't have all the info. "I hope I'm wrong" .... Hell, I hope he is too! ;D I think the facts he was referring to was simply his formula he mentioned. But I wont speak for him.

Anyway...one person say it, i'll listen. Now multiple testers apparently... Ok, you have my attention. Remaining positive about this release unless and until I see reason otherwise. :)
 
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privatebydesign said:

We don't have any factual information on which to base any objective measure of the output of the 5DS/R, none, not a word, or measurement.


Oh yes he is.


jrista said:
I'm not talking about my own personal subjective perceptions of how I "feel" when I see a Canon image or a Nikon image. Again, this is simple, objective, mathematical stuff here. Cold, hard facts...not feelings.

Do you see the disconnect there? At this point in time we know nothing, we are just speculating on what Canon reps have said and to tell the truth what Mike Burnhill of Canon CPS in the UK said, "but there's a much lower noise floor, so therefore more ability to pull out detail in the shadows and highlights", really is unequivocal.

All I know is I don't know and nobody here does either. I also know and have seen the video of the Canon rep saying the shadow detail is better. How they did it, if they have, will be interesting in a purely academic way, but nobody here has a clue if they have or how.

Proclaiming your post is "Cold, hard facts...not feelings." does not make it so. I would be doing my 3,000+ posts and the forum in general a disservice if I did not point that out, especially when we have follow up posters saying "He's not stating it as fact"!

No he's basing it on their current tech ie 7D II and what it needs to do to increase the DR. He doesn't have access to a 5Ds and is using the information available....

But you cannot use previous posts to discredit the current argument, it has to be based on the current one. On that basis, I believe the comments about measuring DR are correct. I've not verified his figures on the MK II, but there's been no announcement to suggest any step-change in DR for that sensor.

So it comes back down to whether Canon has reduced read-noise. Which everyone hopes they have done....
 
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privatebydesign said:
Stu_bert said:
privatebydesign said:
PureClassA said:
JRista gave us a nice long detailed explanation how DR works, said given what we know now, he doesn't see how it could be improved that much. Then he said "I hope I'm wrong" Not sure how you could be more scientific and fair minded than that.

Stu_bert said:
Jon is basing his reasoning on what he knows of current sensors and forming a conclusion. He does not profess to know, he's just interpreting information based on facts and science. I also personally find it useful and helpful, so thank you Jon.

No, he gave us his uninformed opinion of sensor tech coming from an informal 'education' about such technical matters garnered from the internet, forums, patents and other such self taught sources.

He has made several mistakes in his theories before and has often faltered in his knowledge when confronted by somebody with more experience in one particular area, he has no formal education on cameras or their tech.

His opinion is not fact, it is opinion, he usually muddies the two and too many here seem to take his word as gospel, it isn't.

Ouch. Seriously? You're going to mince my own words? I'm not saying he is correct. He is informed based on what he has read about how you measure or calculate DR, based on the DR of the 7D II and the information we have on the 5Ds. He's not stating it as fact - the facts are around the current sensor tech.

He, nor I, not PureClassA are attacking Canon nor you personally. Please stop the personal attack. If he's made mistakes before, gosh I'm sure so have many others on here. Let's keep the focus on what this thread is about, which is whether the 5Ds will be 2 stops better. If you disagree with the formula he used or his interpretation of current sensor data, then share it and I will happily admit that your interpretation is also good and useful.

But let's please avoid comments about whether he is human or not. We all are.

We don't have any factual information on which to base any objective measure of the output of the 5DS/R, none, not a word, or measurement.


Oh yes he is.


jrista said:
I'm not talking about my own personal subjective perceptions of how I "feel" when I see a Canon image or a Nikon image. Again, this is simple, objective, mathematical stuff here. Cold, hard facts...not feelings.

Do you see the disconnect there? At this point in time we know nothing, we are just speculating on what Canon reps have said and to tell the truth what Mike Burnhill of Canon CPS in the UK said, "but there's a much lower noise floor, so therefore more ability to pull out detail in the shadows and highlights", really is unequivocal.

All I know is I don't know and nobody here does either. I also know and have seen the video of the Canon rep saying the shadow detail is better. How they did it, if they have, will be interesting in a purely academic way, but nobody here has a clue if they have or how.

Proclaiming your post is "Cold, hard facts...not feelings." does not make it so. I would be doing my 3,000+ posts and the forum in general a disservice if I did not point that out, especially when we have follow up posters saying "He's not stating it as fact"!


Dear god. I really hate these forums, so freaking pedantic. Let me spell it out for you, Private, since you can't seem to figure out where the line between fact and educated guess falls on your own.


The cold, hard fact I'm referring to is the freakin mathematical formula below:

Code:
DR = FWC/Noise

That's just math. It isn't some kind of personal opinion, some kind of feeling or some kind of subjective evaluation. THAT is the cold, hard fact...DR is DR, more noise and/or lower FWC mean less DR. Less noise and/or higher FWC means more DR. That is a cold, hard fact. THAT! ^^ That thing up there! ^^ THAT IS A FACT. That is THE fact that I am referring to.


Now, onto the non facts, the educated guesses, and the most likely outcomes...as based on and derived from what the cold hard facts can tell us.


Based on the simple, cold, hard, unfeeling fact that dynamic range is a simple ratio, I am then extrapolating what I personally believe is most likely to be the case with the 5Ds (I thought my extrapolations and educated guesses would be obvious as extrapolations and educated guesses, rather than cold, hard facts...but everyone is so freakin sensitive about being told their camera hardware of choice isn't the best of the best of the best of the best of the freakin best around here and cannot hear anything about how it might possibly not be as good as something else, apparently that's too much to ask :o ).

Based on that formula above, assuming all the rumors we have heard so far are true, and those rumors are:

* The 5Ds has the same dynamic range as the 5D III
* The 5Ds has pixels just slightly larger than the 7D II (4.14 micron vs. 4.1 micron)
* The 5Ds has lower noise (which is certainly likely, given the 7D II has lower noise)
* The 5Ds has a stronger CFA (not disputing that, but it would reduce QE, specifically EQE)
* The 5Ds is still being manufactured on Canon's older 500nm process

There are also historical facts from which we can derive a solid educated guess about what the likely outcome for the 5Ds will be:


* Canon did not change much with the 7D II (they reduced banding a little bit more, reduced dark current, slight increase in read noise...in other words, "same old same old")
* Canon has innovated intriguing new sensor technologies for many years, but has thus far not employed any of them in an actual consumer product (120mp APS-H with likely CP-ADC, layered BSI sensors, etc.)
* Canon takes a highly conservative approach to the modern marketplace (probably for good reason, given natural disasters, collapsing markets, and falling sales)
* Canon has innovated technologies, shown them off...then other manufacturers have jumped the gun and released consumer products with similar or better innovations before we even hear of any additional news of said innovation from Canon (ultra low light sensor capable of imaging fireflies in the dark real-time. Canon's sensor? Who knows. Sony A7s? Consumer product you can buy.)

Thus, extrapolating from those rumors (the non-facts) and historical facts, we can arrive at likely realities once the camera is actually released:

Canon has a history of innovating, and not actually employing those innovations in consumer grade products, so given the rumor that the 5Ds is still manufactured on a 500nm process, it seems significantly less likely to see any radical new innovations with this particular camera (not barring future innovations in future cameras, the 5D IV could still hit the streets with amazing new technology).

And:

The 5Ds will probably have RN in the realm of 13e-, which would indeed be lower noise than the 6D or 5D III, and very slightly higher than the 7D II. The 5Ds, having pixels similar to the 7D II in size, will also probably have an FWC in the realm of 30,000e-, which is also lower than the 6D or 5D III.

And:

With lower RN but also a correspondingly lower FWC, the dynamic range of the 5Ds is unlikely to increase unless some additional improvement has been employed that refutes one of the rumors or official statements thus far made.


Therefor, given the cold, hard fact about dynamic range...that it is simply the ratio between FWC and noise:

Code:
20 * log(30000/13) / 6 = 11.21


Barring some additional innovation in the 5Ds (certainly possible), the cold hard facts tell me that, assuming all the rumors, including the words of Canon officials, end up being true, I believe the 5Ds will have roughly the same dynamic range as any other Canon DSLR. It is possible that DIGIC6 will be employed to reduce noise, however it's being employed for that purpose in the 7D II...and the 7D II has 11.2 stops of DR, so at the moment I have no reason to make any assumptions that DIGIC6 will improve noise in the 5Ds.


Furthermore, because a reduction in read noise paired with a reduction in FWC requires that exposure be shifted down into the shadows to preserve the highlights with that lower FWC, any improvement in shadow pushing ability that lower read noise may have otherwise offered is nullified. Therefor, while the 0.04 micron increase in 5Ds pixel size might allow for a slightly higher FWC than 30ke-, which could allow for a small fraction increase in dynamic range and slight improvement in shadow pushing ability...I see no reason to assume it means the 5Ds will have two additional stops of dynamic range.


That is my educated guess, based on the cold hard facts of dynamic range. Based on my educated guess, my recommendation based on a realistic outlook for the camera is that one should not get their hopes up for a 5Ds with 13.8 stops of DR. If the camera DOES arrive with that much DR, well, at least those who take my recommendation will be pleasantly surprised, rather than devastatingly disappointed. ::)

Alright. I've spelled it all out in fine, pedant-pleasing detail, clearly separating and delineating the facts from my educated guesses (oh, sorry, my own very limited and entirely personal (and unrelated to anyone else's feelings or desires or life goals) opinions). Is everyone happy now? ???
 
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So anyway, wondering if anyone has an answer to this question. There's speculation that the sensor MIGHT run at a lower temperature and might have lower read noise. Would this affect long exposure noise in any way? The one thing I hate about my 5d2 is the long exposure noise. I can fix it mostly by combining 2 exposures (usually I only want the slow shutter speed for clouds or water) but I'd like to skip that step if possible. Does anyone know theoretically of course.
 
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benperrin said:
So anyway, wondering if anyone has an answer to this question. There's speculation that the sensor MIGHT run at a lower temperature and might have lower read noise. Would this affect long exposure noise in any way? The one thing I hate about my 5d2 is the long exposure noise. I can fix it mostly by combining 2 exposures (usually I only want the slow shutter speed for clouds or water) but I'd like to skip that step if possible. Does anyone know theoretically of course.


It is definitely possible. There was a rumor...at least a year ago now?...that indicated Canon was working on some kind of active cooling. My guess is there is a fan or heat pipe of some kind in the camera body that moves heat away from the sensor, possibly releasing it along the body.


If the 5Ds is based on the same technology as the 7D II, it should be starting out with significantly lower dark current noise. It's got slightly different pixels, though, so it may not gain the same benefits as the 7D II. Active cooling should certainly help, however if the camera has 0.6e-/s/px dark current at 33C, it's already ludicrously low, so cooling would have a marginal effect. If the dark current is the same as the 6D, then active cooling could help.


One area where it might help more than others is when shooting in sunlight. I've photographed birds on some hot days, and I remember my camera getting very hot to the touch. Some kinds of active cooling (i.e. TEC) could certainly help keep dark current lower in such situations. Heat pipe or fan should also help a little, as a warmed up sensor would still likely be hotter than ambient.


It should also be noted that studies done decades ago showed that cooling does not seem to have any significant impact on read noise, only dark current. So I wouldn't expect any active cooling system to reduce read noise, which would be the primary source of noise if DC was 0.6e-/s/px.
 
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jrista said:
It is definitely possible. There was a rumor...at least a year ago now?...that indicated Canon was working on some kind of active cooling. My guess is there is a fan or heat pipe of some kind in the camera body that moves heat away from the sensor, possibly releasing it along the body.


If the 5Ds is based on the same technology as the 7D II, it should be starting out with significantly lower dark current noise. It's got slightly different pixels, though, so it may not gain the same benefits as the 7D II. Active cooling should certainly help, however if the camera has 0.6e-/s/px dark current at 33C, it's already ludicrously low, so cooling would have a marginal effect. If the dark current is the same as the 6D, then active cooling could help.


One area where it might help more than others is when shooting in sunlight. I've photographed birds on some hot days, and I remember my camera getting very hot to the touch. Some kinds of active cooling (i.e. TEC) could certainly help keep dark current lower in such situations. Heat pipe or fan should also help a little, as a warmed up sensor would still likely be hotter than ambient.


It should also be noted that studies done decades ago showed that cooling does not seem to have any significant impact on read noise, only dark current. So I wouldn't expect any active cooling system to reduce read noise, which would be the primary source of noise if DC was 0.6e-/s/px.
Thanks for the response Jon. I can't say I've ever been in a situation where my camera was hot to touch. It probably doesn't get as hot here.

Now you've provided me with some interesting reading to think over. I'll have to do some research on dark current noise. Sounds like I'll be much happier with the 5dsr than the 5d2 if the 6d and 7d2 are already much better. Once again thanks for the response.
 
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dilbert said:
Stu_bert said:
dilbert said:
bmwzimmer said:
Latest update (Feb 10th) from NL is stating Other testers as well are also claiming the 5DS/R has the best Dynamic range of any pro current canon camera.

Ok i think this deserves a CR2 by now.

My grandmother has more DR than any current pro canon camera.

-1

And the benefit of such a comment?

It is a joke poking at the lack of evidence of the claims being made - anyone can claim anything but providing evidence to back up those claims is another thing.

Thus far we have people making claims and ... no evidence in the form of raw files.

Err ok... didnt come across as a joke to me, but that is personal taste so I'll retract...
 
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benperrin said:
Thanks for the response Jon. I can't say I've ever been in a situation where my camera was hot to touch. It probably doesn't get as hot here.

Now you've provided me with some interesting reading to think over. I'll have to do some research on dark current noise. Sounds like I'll be much happier with the 5dsr than the 5d2 if the 6d and 7d2 are already much better. Once again thanks for the response.


Welcome.


The 5D II without question has significantly more dark current than Canon's newer cameras. The 5D III still has more than the 6D, but it too is much lower. I would say that the bulk of the 5D II high ISO noise is from dark current, rather than actual read noise. I say that, because in comparisons between cameras done on astro forums, as the 5D II is cooled, it's high ISO performance improves significantly, although not to the point of the 5D III or other newer Canon cameras.


I would figure the 5Ds has to be a least as good as the 6D in that area, and the 6D is a highly regarded camera for astrophotography. The 7D II is about 10x better, but the 6D was no slouch.


The 5Ds R would have another advantage for astrophotography: no AA filter. With astro, you don't have anything that could cause moire, so an AA filter is just costing you resolution. The 5Ds R should make for a great wide field astro cam, and would even work quite well at moderate focal lengths up to around 800-1000mm, and should produce crisp, detailed results...more detailed than most cameras. I'd say the only thing better would be a D810 or the new D810a...they don't have AA filters either, and the new astro version has extremely high Ha (hydrogen alpha) sensitivity, which makes it a lot easier to bring out nebula.
 
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jrista,

You are crazy, and I kinda mean that in a nice way, like my wife is crazy, and I love her.

It just took you 1381 words (I put it in a word counter), equations, repetition, and snake oil, to say "I believe the 5Ds will have roughly the same dynamic range as any other Canon DSLR. " But we all know that because two Canon reps have said exactly that on video. Well done for breaking new ground.

As for your "educated guesses", one, as I have already said, you have no formal education in this field, well you have never pointed out that you have before and being the kind of guy you are I am sure you would have done, and two, you have made definitive sounding "educated guesses" before and they have been woefully off the mark.

Now I am sure my position is horribly misunderstood, and that is a shame, so in the hope of bringing this to a close, at least from me.

1/ Canon have said the DR in the 5DS/R is equivalent to the DR of the 5D MkIII when using traditional measuring techniques. Whilst I fully understand the meaning of the word equivalent I would not venture to guess exactly what Canon actually mean or are implying from that. To me it sounds like a Clintonesque "I did not have sexual relations with that woman", we can then argue the toss about what Canon understand the meaning of equivalent and traditional measuring techniques, or sexual relations! But we will not know until we have RAW files.
2/ Canon have said there is more editing latitude in the shadows and highlights due to a lower noise floor. To me that sounds like there is more editing latitude in the shadows and highlights.
3/ Some unnamed photographers claiming actual first hand use are saying they have more editing latitude which they equate to 1.5-2 more stops of usable range, perhaps mistakenly simplified as DR. Photographers are not lab techs and I see no contradiction in people saying one thing when a tech will call it something else, think "lens compression" and perspective.
4/ I don't have the faintest idea, and nobody else here does either, how much difference Canon are talking about and how useful any difference will be in actual real world shooting.
5/ Nobody here has the slightest idea what Canon have done in hardware, firmware, and or software to achieve the differences they have. Everything is just uninformed and uneducated speculation.

Now you might, if you have a brain, realise that my position is within a gnats hair of being the same as jrista's, what I don't do is wrap up the obvious in 1,600 of repetitive verbage. We have been told two things by Canon, DR is the same, and the noise floor is lower so editing latitude is higher. There are growing reports from non techs that the second is true.
 
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privatebydesign said:
Now you might, if you have a brain, realise that my position is within a gnats hair of being the same as jrista's, what I don't do is wrap up the obvious in 1,600 of repetitive verbage. We have been told two things by Canon, DR is the same, and the noise floor is lower so editing latitude is higher. There are growing reports from non techs that the second is true.


You write that as though being verbose is some kind of atrocity. If you like to be terse, more power to ya. You guys are pedantic about everything, so I've learned to be as verbose and explicit as possible, and even then, it doesn't matter.


The reason I'm writing what I am writing is Canon has said one thing, but they haven't said another thing, and both things are important to improving DR. Lowering the read noise floor is meaningless in the context of a smaller pixel if they did not also increase the amount of charge each pixel can hold. Lower read noise + lower FWC != more editing latitude. Lower read noise with a smaller pixel AND a larger charge capacity would, then, mean more editing latitude...maybe Canon has done that. However if they did, then the statement that the 5Ds has the same dynamic range as the 5D III would be false. Something doesn't add up.


Canon HAS stated that the dynamic range of the 5Ds is the same as the 5D III. I also don't believe in any kind of alternative means of measuring dynamic range...it is what it is, and if you want apples-to-apples comparisons, you gotta measure the same way. I'm not going to give out any special treatment here. Given that, the only logical conclusion I can come to is that the FWC has not been increased for the given size of pixel. That means that in order to protect the highlights, you have to shift exposure down to keep those highlights from clipping, which pushes more information into the read noise floor. Same as with any other camera...hence the reason a lower read noise floor rapidly leads to more dynamic range.


Dynamic range is agnostic of any of these nuances...dynamic range is dynamic range. If it's the same as the 5D III, but has the low banding of the 7D II, it's going to have about the same shadow pushing ability as the 7D II. Which is marginally improved over prior Canon cameras, but nothing anywhere remotely close to what you can do with something that actually has 13.8 stops of DR.


There is a logical disconnect between "lower read noise" and "same DR as 5D III" and "more editing latitude"...one of those can't be true if the other two are true. Lower Read Noise + More Editing Latitude != Same DR as 5D III; Lower Read Noise + Same DR as 5D III != More Editing Latitude; More Editing Latitude + Same DR as 5D III != Lower Read Noise. That final one could also be stated this way: More Editing Latitude + Same DR as 5D III != Lower Read Noise + Higher FWC. Lower RN+Higher FWC != Same DR as 5D III, therefor editing latitude must still be the same, or the camera has more dynamic range than the 5D III.

Alright, I've stuck you on my ignore list. Goodbye.
 
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