my bet5 is that it starts showing up everywhere....pedro said:I just wondered, if that is the current sensor tech to be applied in Canon's FF body line-up or if this feature will remain a characteristic asset of the flag ship line only? Or is it too early for any guess work? Thanks for your opinions.
Stu_bert said:Didn't canon say on chip adc cost more?
Stu_bert said:Didn't canon say on chip adc cost more? I guess it's a balance of cost vs revenue. If the 80d comes with it, then it will be pervasive. If it doesn't then alas there is a chance Canon will indeed be selective. The mk 4 should have it without question, but if the 80d doesn't have it then the 6d mk 2 will be the borderline case I think
3kramd5 said:Stu_bert said:Didn't canon say on chip adc cost more?
Non-recurring costs of setting up a new fab are very high.
rrcphoto said:3kramd5 said:Stu_bert said:Didn't canon say on chip adc cost more?
Non-recurring costs of setting up a new fab are very high.
not really.
3kramd5 said:rrcphoto said:3kramd5 said:Stu_bert said:Didn't canon say on chip adc cost more?
Non-recurring costs of setting up a new fab are very high.
not really.
Relative to recurring costs? Because that was the essence. Once the infrastructure investment is made, be it building a new fab, building new tooling, or whatever, using it is relatively cheap in this case, no?
rrcphoto said:3kramd5 said:rrcphoto said:3kramd5 said:Stu_bert said:Didn't canon say on chip adc cost more?
Non-recurring costs of setting up a new fab are very high.
not really.
Relative to recurring costs? Because that was the essence. Once the infrastructure investment is made, be it building a new fab, building new tooling, or whatever, using it is relatively cheap in this case, no?
a) they didn't build a new fab .. they would have announced that, and it would have been in their reports.
b) they had a 180nm sensor line already with copper BEOL.
c) the equipment used by modern full frame sensors is 20+ years old, the cost is negligible.
brad-man said:I have read of both of those features as well. However, I don't recall the source(s) as being particularly reliable. Can you point me in the right direction for reliable confirmation?
The best I could find was an interview by Ari Hazeghi with Chuck Westfall:
"AH: In addition to the very modest increase in resolution from 18 to 20 Mega-pixels, what improvements have Canon made to the CMOS image sensor that would translate to a higher image quality when shooting in RAW (CR2) format?
CW: In addition to the first implementation of Dual Pixel CMOS AF in a full frame image sensor, the EOS-1D X Mark II showcases the latest Canon image sensor technologies such as new photodiode construction, new color filters, and greater photo-electric conversion efficiency. In plain English, the new image sensor delivers higher image quality at all ISO speeds for both RAW image data and JPEG files."
It's not clear to me how that greater efficiency is achieved.
brad-man said:I have read of both of those features as well. However, I don't recall the source(s) as being particularly reliable. Can you point me in the right direction for reliable confirmation?
The best I could find was an interview by Ari Hazeghi with Chuck Westfall:
Mt Spokane Photography said:Last September, the Canon Photography chief (Now Canon President) said the following. I would expect to see mostly on-chip for models that were not already being prepared for release. The on-chip A/D sensors were most likely the ones they currently use from Sony.
"DE: This is actually a very technical question. I’m not sure if it’s one that you would be free to answer or not, but with sensor technology some have pointed to the analog-to-digital conversion implementations being very critical for image quality and dynamic range. Can you tell us whether Canon currently uses on-chip or off-chip A/D converters?
MM: Right now, we use both on-chip and off-chip, but recently I made the decision going forward to concentrate on the on-chip.
DE: Mm-hmm. Yes.
MM: The intent is to increase the performance. In terms of cost, this may be a little negative, but in terms of the direction to take, this will make us more competitive.
DE: So the net cost, the combined cost of the sensor and separate A/D is less than a sensor with A/D on it. Ah, I didn’t realize that!"