Orangutan said:dtaylor said:Orangutan said:To be fair, I think jrista posted two reasonable examples: one was the room interior with bright window, and the other was a stream with bright sky.
No one has posted a reasonable example. That would require both sensors shot so that all other factors are equal, and RAW files provided for everyone to evaluate.
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jrista doesn't actually know this. Neither do you or I. You have to actually test both at the same scene.
I'll grant that it hasn't met scientific standards, and I'd like to see the side-by-side you describe. My opinion that jrista's examples were reasonable was based on two criteria: my personal experience with my 60D (I'm aware it's not Canon's best) and jrista's history of being careful about his assertions. I.e., he's earned the benefit of my initial trust (as if he cares), though I would be pleased to see scientifically valid tests to support the assertion.
Thanks for the vote of confidence.
I would honestly post direct comparisons if I had the ability to. I think I'm going to rent a D800 next chance I get (I'm just coming off a week vacation, and I hadn't planned on renting a D800 or D810 before hand...next vacation I will.) There ARE D800 raw files available on the net that demonstrate the differences fairly well. I don't think I've really encountered all that many that truly show of the true shadow lifting power of having two additional stops of dynamic range well enough...and even if I did manage to find some NEFs that did, they would of course be suspect.
The only way the issue can reasonably be settled is if I do as you say...take some comparison images myself in identical scenarios, be open about how I did my testing, and freely provide my RAW files (which I have done on several occasions, including recently with the sunflower RAW.) I have never expected miracles, but in my experience with D800 NEFs, you don't "just" have more editing latitude...the data is very clean, the tonality and color fidelity, is better than in any Canon CR2 file that deep into the shadows, and even if you don't like the lower contrast that heavy shadow lifting often results in, you still get better, cleaner, softer, smoother falloff into the shadows than you do with a Canon file.
I'd really love to have that kind of deep shadow image quality in my Canon RAWs...
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