candc said:
If an image viewed at 100% and the individual pixels have better iso performance then it is due to their individual size and characteristics not from whichever sensor they were plucked from
I do not have a screen large enough to view a landscape at 100%.
Don't you understand that the so called 100% view represents different magnifications of the same image? What sane people care about is noise at a reference view size. For example, I view my images full screen on whatever computer I am using.
An image shot with the d800 in DX mode will have better iso performance than a canon aps-c camera also. Its due to Nikon doing a better job in that department right now not some phantom photon noise due to the sensor size
I guess Nikon failed to do such a good job with the D600/D610? Having larger pixels, they should have less noise, right? And how come the D800 has better noise than
Nikon crop cameras?
Phantom photon noise? Let me guess, you think that Earth is flat, too?
paul13walnut5 said:
Can you then answer the conundrum about the projected image circle of any given EF lens being consistent no matter the camera attached to the lens. Will the image circle, regardless of what happens to it in the cameras electronics, setting for setting, be the same? The projected image circle only please. You have until the dartboard revolves....
Yes, under the implicit assumptions, but so what? Google "photon noise", then google the webpage of Emil at U of Chicago.
paul13walnut5 said:
Is the D800 43.5MP? (18MP APS-C scaled up) Is it 54MP? (24MP APS-C ala Nikon D3200 scaled up)
No it is not.
Does the D600 have larger pixels? It does.