privatebydesign said:Aglet said:BTW, as an extra, i shots some crude tests with my UN-beloved 5D2 last night.
MIDTONE BANDING at iso 100 - it still has it! Real-world photos are where I first found the problem, specific test shots certainly replicate it. I need to do a few more tests just to make sure this is not a glitch of my display calibration curve but I'm pretty sure it isn't as I can accentuate the pattern with a simple unsharp function in PS.
Should i start a new topic with that when I get a chance?
You keep saying this but are always unable to post a photo illustrating it, whenever you are asked for one, or the percentage of your images you loose to it, you leave the thread.
Can we see some of these real world images that you consider unusable?
neuroanatomist said:The problem is that there's no free lunch. A "true" ISO 50 would mean a lower base ISO, meaning that to achieve higher ISOs, even more amplification would be needed - meaning more high ISO noise. Usually, if ISO 100 is not low enough, one stop more is insufficient, at least in terms of shutter speed. The waterfall example posted earlier at ISO 50 and 5 s exposure required f/18 to get there - personally, I'd have preferred to shoot that at f/9 and ISO 100 with a 3-stop ND.
Mikael Risedal said:pardon my intrusion here Mikael, but the words and concepts you are using in the above is not under question. WHat is under question is the posts where you say that the HTP causes half the number of photons to reach the sensor.
Mikael Risedal said:That they gain a head room and a better reproduction of the high lights if they shoot JPG and don't know raw, under or over exposure, post processing etc .
privatebydesign said:You keep saying this but are always unable to post a photo illustrating it, whenever you are asked for one, or the percentage of your images you loose to it, you leave the thread.
Can we see some of these real world images that you consider unusable?
dlleno said:Mikael Risedal said:That they gain a head room and a better reproduction of the high lights if they shoot JPG and don't know raw, under or over exposure, post processing etc .
no -- that is not the mechanism that is the benefit. how will you explain the HTP mechanism, the effect of exposure, and the number of photons striking the sensor.
Mikael Risedal said:My dear Neuro, do not tell me I am wrong with out pointing out what is wrong.
short please
point by point
Mikael Risedal said:I have just done that both by text and by and illustration. Now its up to you and understanddlleno said:Mikael Risedal said:That they gain a head room and a better reproduction of the high lights if they shoot JPG and don't know raw, under or over exposure, post processing etc .
no -- that is not the mechanism that is the benefit. how will you explain the HTP mechanism, the effect of exposure, and the number of photons striking the sensor.![]()
dlleno said:Mikael Risedal said:I have just done that both by text and by and illustration. Now its up to you and understanddlleno said:Mikael Risedal said:That they gain a head room and a better reproduction of the high lights if they shoot JPG and don't know raw, under or over exposure, post processing etc .
no -- that is not the mechanism that is the benefit. how will you explain the HTP mechanism, the effect of exposure, and the number of photons striking the sensor.![]()
I don't think you have, Mikael. Here is the question again: when the camera's ISO dial is set to something besides 100 (I mean it it is set to 160, 200, 400, or 800 or 1600, etc. etc.) how will you explain the HTT mechanism, the effect upon exposure and the number of photons striking the sensor?
Well, looks like Mikael stands by his Half The Photons theory. Choosing not to communicate on that statement is a communication in itself. Obviously he has a direct channel to the Photon God. So every time he sets his camera to HTP, his request for a reduction in photons is granted by that God...neuroanatomist said:dlleno said:Mikael Risedal said:I have just done that both by text and by and illustration. Now its up to you and understanddlleno said:Mikael Risedal said:That they gain a head room and a better reproduction of the high lights if they shoot JPG and don't know raw, under or over exposure, post processing etc .
no -- that is not the mechanism that is the benefit. how will you explain the HTP mechanism, the effect of exposure, and the number of photons striking the sensor.![]()
I don't think you have, Mikael. Here is the question again: when the camera's ISO dial is set to something besides 100 (I mean it it is set to 160, 200, 400, or 800 or 1600, etc. etc.) how will you explain the HTT mechanism, the effect upon exposure and the number of photons striking the sensor?
My point from earlier, the explanation is 'right' in the same way a broken analog clock is 'right' twice a day.
Mikael Risedal said:The time 0324 here in Sweden,
if you Neuro tell another person they are wrong
please point at the errors.
Good night!Mikael Risedal said:My G.... You two Neuroanatomist and Rpt don't know the basic how a sensor works, collecting photons and if you are halving the time= go from 100 iso to 200 iso you are halving the amount of hitting light/photons on the sensor and the amount of read out electrons by half.
God night
neuroanatomist said:Mikael Risedal said:The time 0324 here in Sweden,
if you Neuro tell another person they are wrong
please point at the errors.
I have. Many times I'd suggest the late hour is affecting your reading comprehension, but since I've told you several times now, at various times, that's not it.
In previous posts, you accused others of not being able to admit when they are wrong, and questioned our ability to read. Ironic, isn't it...
Thanks. I will play around with this and see what I can learn.Mikael Risedal said:Hobby Shooter said:I do that regularly with my 5D3 to work around the shadow noise. Results are normally great.Marsu42 said:Mikael Risedal said:so regarding of the subject (motive with no high lights = motive with a small DR) you can overexpose and get a benefit of the over exposure in the shadows
That's great information, thanks! I'll certainly use that once I've got a 6d and am doing tripod macro focus stacks with low dr objects.
Mikael, question to you, do I understand correct that you mean this is best for low DR pictures ie flatter? I learned through reading a couple of articles to also use this in more high DR situations like taking a street picture with the sun low. I have no experience of not being able to recover details from overexposed highlights. Is there something I'm missing here?
yes a picture turn out flat with a large DR and which shall be presented in 0-256 levels, but you can adjust the motive so it do not look so flat with different kind of post processing, for example chose some parts and make selective adjustments