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msm said:neuroanatomist said:Yes, it's quite a good trick to have DR "in mid 14's" when your camera has a 14-bit ADC. Hail to the almighty DxO Biased Scores, and kudos to those that revel in that BS. :![]()
Yes clearly, here is a 1bit image 8192 pixels wide, then the same 1bit image again downsampled to 1024 pixels. As you clearly can see there can't possibly be more than 1stop DR in this image :![]()
Certainly, there are ways to digitally increase the DR in an already-captured image. I bet your grandmother knows how to suck eggs without you having to teach her.
Which camera did you use that converted the original >1 stop analog signal to digital using a 1-bit ADC?
At issue is the scene DR vs. the system DR at image capture. Are you suggesting that signal above the full well capacity or below the noise floor can be included in the dynamic range of an image? That a sensor with a 13.5-stop difference between noise floor and full well capacity can capture the full DR of a scene with 14.4-stops of DR, in a single image?
But lots of people like BS, and seem to eat it up with a giant spoon. For example, in this post on Digital Camera World that purports to explain, "...what you need to know about capturing all the tones in a scene," the author states that:
[quote author=Markus Hawkins on Digital Camera World]
For instance, the Nikon D610’s dynamic range has been measured at between 13 and 14.4 EV at ISO 100.
[/quote]
The D610's DR has been measured at 14.4 EV. Do you believe that statement to be true? Is the D610 capturing all the tones in a scene when that scene has 14.4 stops of DR? Personally, I think Markus has eaten a big helping of DxO and his breath reeks of BS.
DxO aside, it's true that 14-bit ADCs are commonly used because that's more than required to fully represent the captured range of current sensors. As sensors exceed than 14-bit limit, camera makers could clip or map that >14-bit signal into the smaller range. It would be transformed data still called RAW, but that's already common (Nikon applied NR to RAW, Sony applies lossy compression, and Canon's mRAW and sRAW aren't really RAW). More likely they'll just move to 16-bit ADCs (just like they went from 12- to 14-bits a while back). The step after that (18-bits) will be the tricky one.
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