EOS-1D X Mark II Dynamic Range [CR2]

Diko said:
bollo said:
I've never seen such an argumentative, self absorbed, smug, infantile and downright pathetic group as that which regularly posts here. Nothing is more important than being right, starting a fight, arguing over nothing or scoring points.
Good day MR. bollo, that is what discussion groups are all about:
Entertainment, Education & Clash of Egos.

You obviously dislike all that "noise". So feel free to never ever allow thyself wasting any precious time around here.
It is your (birth)right.

ScottyP said:
...dual pixel AF in the 70d, for example), right?
Nope. 70D otherwise had little to offer. So they needed urgently to come up with something so not to stop the cash flow. ;-) Actually if you have been around. Since the 5D mark II the only ground braking novelty was exactly DAF. Otherwise it was a boring cycle of moderately (compared to the competition) increasing the specs. I don't count the new flash 600 series, because I see nothing genuinely new there either.

I said WAS, because now these rumors of new CMOS with competitive DR and the new E-TTL III are quite promising. As it seems finally Canon has heard its users and came to reality where there exist competition.

sanj said:
Yes you are right, but it is a rumor site. We like to discuss possibilities. One thing leads to another and along the way we learn photography techniques .:)
....
Besides this is the internet. It needs to be different than a social club. Here faceless people can and should say their minds. That is the fun bit...
That was beautiful... May I quote you? :-)

Yes, of course. :)

rs said:
tpatana said:
I want to be able to push shadows so many stops that I can shoot with lens cap on and still recover the picture in LR.
Some traditional Canon users would consider shooting at base ISO in low light with the lens cap still on as bad technique - I consider it one if the many basic situations the sensor should be able to overcome ;)

Absolutely. 95% of the time I begin shooting with the lens cap on. Which also makes always my models smile. A good time for a photo ;-)

May I quote you? :)
 
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jrista said:
pedro said:
Thank you, exquisitor. In reference to improved high ISO IQ what will the improvement be like, on correctly exposed images using on-chip-in-row-ADC in comparison to the discussed dual ISO concept? Or, what wil be the overall improvement of either of those new concepts over current ADC tech? 1/2, 1, or two stops combined with new Digics and reasonable MP count? I would be absolutely happy with 12800ish ISO 25.600 ;-)


High ISO performance is going to be more dependent upon sensor Q.E. than ADC performance. Because the signal is initially amplified in each pixel, it is stronger coming off the sensor. The ADC will still add noise, but it's a relatively consistent amount of noise, so relative to a strongly amplified signal, it's small. There is also little value in using dual-ISO techniques at high ISO, as you aren't able to make full use of the dynamic range of the sensor in the first place.


As Q.E. on current Canon sensors is already up in the 60% range, it's unlikely we will see a 1-stop improvement in high ISO noise unless larger pixels are used (or something else that increases well capacity). It is primarily at low ISO where a reduction in read noise will increase dynamic range. A dual-ISO approach can certainly improve things, however as your effectively blending two different exposures with different noise characteristics, this can often create artifacts (check MagicLantern images). The best approach is to actually use better technology to prevent noise in the first place. Isolating high-frequency components away from ADC units, using more ADC units so they can operate at lower frequency, reducing trace distance from pixel to ADC, converting to digital at the earliest convenience and using error-corrected data transfer, etc.

Always an education listening to you bud. It looks like a useful feature but no free lunch....
 
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jrista said:
pedro said:
Thank you, exquisitor. In reference to improved high ISO IQ what will the improvement be like, on correctly exposed images using on-chip-in-row-ADC in comparison to the discussed dual ISO concept? Or, what wil be the overall improvement of either of those new concepts over current ADC tech? 1/2, 1, or two stops combined with new Digics and reasonable MP count? I would be absolutely happy with 12800ish ISO 25.600 ;-)


High ISO performance is going to be more dependent upon sensor Q.E. than ADC performance. Because the signal is initially amplified in each pixel, it is stronger coming off the sensor. The ADC will still add noise, but it's a relatively consistent amount of noise, so relative to a strongly amplified signal, it's small. There is also little value in using dual-ISO techniques at high ISO, as you aren't able to make full use of the dynamic range of the sensor in the first place.


As Q.E. on current Canon sensors is already up in the 60% range, it's unlikely we will see a 1-stop improvement in high ISO noise unless larger pixels are used (or something else that increases well capacity). It is primarily at low ISO where a reduction in read noise will increase dynamic range. A dual-ISO approach can certainly improve things, however as your effectively blending two different exposures with different noise characteristics, this can often create artifacts (check MagicLantern images). The best approach is to actually use better technology to prevent noise in the first place. Isolating high-frequency components away from ADC units, using more ADC units so they can operate at lower frequency, reducing trace distance from pixel to ADC, converting to digital at the earliest convenience and using error-corrected data transfer, etc.
well said!

and let me add a further factor why this is so important....

Say your QE is 50 percent, your well size is 16,000 electrons, and 32000 photons hit your pixel.

That puts 16,000 electrons into the well for a bright pixel, 0 for a dark pixel. If you had perfect and noise free A/D conversion, (you could accurately count each electron), a 14 bit number would be all that was required to hold the result... those 14 bits would be all the accuracy you could ever get out of the system. If you had somewhere between 0 and 8 electrons of read noise, amp noise, and A/D noise, you loose 3 bits of precision off of the bottom of your signal and your 14 bit number becomes a 14 bit number that is only accurate to 11 bits. The less the noise, the greater the accuracy.

Even so, with perfect electronics, you are still stuck at 14 bits.... but if you can bump up the QE of your sensor from 50% to 75% you end up with 24000 electrons in the well and that bumps your accuracy up to 14.5 bits.... even if you invented some miracle technology that had a perfect photon to electron conversion, you would still be at 15 bits. If you want to go higher, you need more photons and the only two ways to do that are to gather more light or to make bigger pixels... and this is why, at similar pixel counts and levels of technology, FF outperforms crop by 1 1/3 stops..... because the pixels are 2.5 times larger and gather 2.5 times more light.

Right now, Sony/Nikon/Canon are chasing diminishing returns. The electronics are by no means perfect, but for all of them, over half the photons that enter the sensor get converted to electrons and are counted to various degrees of accuracy. Improvements will be made, but they will be tiny compared to the wild increases of 5-10 years ago and fairly soon they will reach convergence... that point where there are no significant differences.
 
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Mt Spokane Photography said:
High DR, like even 8 or 10 at high ISO's would be a area where the improvement is worthwhile. Right now, Canon edges out the competition, but its a struggle.


The Sony A7s actually tops Canon DSLRs by quite a bit. It delivers 9.9 stops at ISO 6400, still delivers 8.8 at ISO 51200, and is still delivering 8.1 at ISO 102400. Conversely, the 1D X is 6.6 @ 51200, 6.0 @ 102400. The 6D actually delivers 6.7 at 51200, and the D4 is 7.1 at 51200.
 
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jrista said:
Mt Spokane Photography said:
High DR, like even 8 or 10 at high ISO's would be a area where the improvement is worthwhile. Right now, Canon edges out the competition, but its a struggle.


The Sony A7s actually tops Canon DSLRs by quite a bit. It delivers 9.9 stops at ISO 6400, still delivers 8.8 at ISO 51200, and is still delivering 8.1 at ISO 102400. Conversely, the 1D X is 6.6 @ 51200, 6.0 @ 102400. The 6D actually delivers 6.7 at 51200, and the D4 is 7.1 at 51200.

It's 12 mp for heaven's sake.

Personally, because I stitch a lot, I'd love a 5D t - assuming the 't' stood for 12 mp. Can't see it ever happening.
 
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Don Haines said:
jrista said:
pedro said:
Thank you, exquisitor. In reference to improved high ISO IQ what will the improvement be like, on correctly exposed images using on-chip-in-row-ADC in comparison to the discussed dual ISO concept? Or, what wil be the overall improvement of either of those new concepts over current ADC tech? 1/2, 1, or two stops combined with new Digics and reasonable MP count? I would be absolutely happy with 12800ish ISO 25.600 ;-)


High ISO performance is going to be more dependent upon sensor Q.E. than ADC performance. Because the signal is initially amplified in each pixel, it is stronger coming off the sensor. The ADC will still add noise, but it's a relatively consistent amount of noise, so relative to a strongly amplified signal, it's small. There is also little value in using dual-ISO techniques at high ISO, as you aren't able to make full use of the dynamic range of the sensor in the first place.


As Q.E. on current Canon sensors is already up in the 60% range, it's unlikely we will see a 1-stop improvement in high ISO noise unless larger pixels are used (or something else that increases well capacity). It is primarily at low ISO where a reduction in read noise will increase dynamic range. A dual-ISO approach can certainly improve things, however as your effectively blending two different exposures with different noise characteristics, this can often create artifacts (check MagicLantern images). The best approach is to actually use better technology to prevent noise in the first place. Isolating high-frequency components away from ADC units, using more ADC units so they can operate at lower frequency, reducing trace distance from pixel to ADC, converting to digital at the earliest convenience and using error-corrected data transfer, etc.
well said!

and let me add a further factor why this is so important....

Say your QE is 50 percent, your well size is 16,000 electrons, and 32000 photons hit your pixel.

That puts 16,000 electrons into the well for a bright pixel, 0 for a dark pixel. If you had perfect and noise free A/D conversion, (you could accurately count each electron), a 14 bit number would be all that was required to hold the result... those 14 bits would be all the accuracy you could ever get out of the system. If you had somewhere between 0 and 8 electrons of read noise, amp noise, and A/D noise, you loose 3 bits of precision off of the bottom of your signal and your 14 bit number becomes a 14 bit number that is only accurate to 11 bits. The less the noise, the greater the accuracy.

Even so, with perfect electronics, you are still stuck at 14 bits.... but if you can bump up the QE of your sensor from 50% to 75% you end up with 24000 electrons in the well and that bumps your accuracy up to 14.5 bits.... even if you invented some miracle technology that had a perfect photon to electron conversion, you would still be at 15 bits. If you want to go higher, you need more photons and the only two ways to do that are to gather more light or to make bigger pixels... and this is why, at similar pixel counts and levels of technology, FF outperforms crop by 1 1/3 stops..... because the pixels are 2.5 times larger and gather 2.5 times more light.

Right now, Sony/Nikon/Canon are chasing diminishing returns. The electronics are by no means perfect, but for all of them, over half the photons that enter the sensor get converted to electrons and are counted to various degrees of accuracy. Improvements will be made, but they will be tiny compared to the wild increases of 5-10 years ago and fairly soon they will reach convergence... that point where there are no significant differences.


Aye, this is indeed correct. Q.E. is into the realm of diminishing returns.


The only thing that no one has covered yet is gain. Because of gain, at higher ISO, you can't actually make use of more charge in the well than your post-amplification signal supports. If your base well capacity is 32000e-, and your at ISO 200, then 16000e- is the highest charge you could convert to a pure white (2^14) ADU count anyway. At ISO 400, 8000e- would be the limit, at ISO 800, 4000e- would be the limit, etc.


This is why increasing well capacity becomes more important as we approach the limits of Q.E. That means either bigger pixels, or multi-layer photodiodes or something like that. Canon actually has very intriguing layered sensor technology that I think may give them an edge in the multi-layer photodiode game. They designed it or stacked RGB sensors, but even if they employed that technology in standard bayer pixels, I think it would still improve DR at high ISO. This is the same technology in Canon's 5-layer sensor. It's anti-reflective, reflective coatings and nano-coatings on both the surface and underside of each photodiode. Basically, a nanocoating is used to prevent reflection off the photodiode, a single-direction reflective surface is used on the bottom of the photodiode (so that any reflected light that tries to escape is actually bounced back down to the photodiode), and there are anti-reflective coatings elsewhere. It's pretty amazing technology, and I'm really looking forward to seeing it used in a commercial camera. I think it could do wonders for high ISO performance...either in a layered (foveon-type) or bayered sensor.


With a higher FWC at base, every time you divide it for each ISO setting, you have more well capacity at higher ISO. That means you can take better advantage of high QE at high ISO, and use even lower gain settings.
 
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Sporgon said:
jrista said:
Mt Spokane Photography said:
High DR, like even 8 or 10 at high ISO's would be a area where the improvement is worthwhile. Right now, Canon edges out the competition, but its a struggle.


The Sony A7s actually tops Canon DSLRs by quite a bit. It delivers 9.9 stops at ISO 6400, still delivers 8.8 at ISO 51200, and is still delivering 8.1 at ISO 102400. Conversely, the 1D X is 6.6 @ 51200, 6.0 @ 102400. The 6D actually delivers 6.7 at 51200, and the D4 is 7.1 at 51200.

It's 12 mp for heaven's sake.

Personally, because I stitch a lot, I'd love a 5D t - assuming the 't' stood for 12 mp. Can't see it ever happening.


There are plenty of people who think current cameras have too many MP. That argument was pushed on these forums for quite some time after even higher resolution cameras hit the market. The 1D X is only 18mp, for that matter, which by todays standards is very low.
 
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