Real iso's?

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wickidwombat said:
Anyone got any idea how many shots you miss while agonising over this? ???

seriously I dont think it makes much of a difference

It doesn't make much difference. I have never agonised over it and I have never missed a shot because of it, I set my camera to only do full stops of iso because that is where empirical tests showed it had less noise. Set once and done, never touched it again.
 
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privatebydesign said:
I set my camera to only do full stops of iso because that is where empirical tests showed it had less noise. Set once and done, never touched it again.

I also set my camera for only full ISO stops...while I certainly appreciate lower noise, honestly the reason is that having selection restricted to full stops means it's a lot faster to ramp the ISO up and down as needed, taking 67% fewer clicks of main dial rotation.
 
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neuroanatomist said:
privatebydesign said:
I set my camera to only do full stops of iso because that is where empirical tests showed it had less noise. Set once and done, never touched it again.

I also set my camera for only full ISO stops...while I certainly appreciate lower noise, honestly the reason is that having selection restricted to full stops means it's a lot faster to ramp the ISO up and down as needed, taking 67% fewer clicks of main dial rotation.

Another good point :)

Although your 1DX has a much wider iso range than my cameras so it would take a lot longer........ heck I could do individual iso points and still have less clicks than you with 1/3 stops, I top out at 1600 but never go above 800!
 
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privatebydesign said:
This makes the statement that ISO 160 is better incorrect. It has to be better everywhere, to be declared better.

No it doesn't and, no it doesn't.

Look we are talking about tiny differences in the ability to process a RAW file, an actual picture. Specifically with a 7D shadow detail is the problem, it is so easy to adjust highlights and midtones 1/3rd stop either way with no loss of IQ, but where we struggle is getting that 1/3 stop extra in the shadows. If using 160 instead of 200 gets you less shot noise and no reduction in DR then surely that is a no brainer?

Better can mean many things, in my experience anything you can do with Canon RAW files to lessen problems in the shadows makes for better images.

Wait, you were talking about ISO 100 vs. ISO 160, and now it is ISO 200 vs. ISO 160?

What the camera is doing with ISO 160 is ETTR with ISO 200. Why do you need a fake ISO for that? Isn't it simpler just to dial in EV=+1/3?

The best ISO is ISO 50 or ISO 80, whatever does not blow the highlights. It is called ETTR. It does not matter if you camera "has it". It is a simple thing to do.
 
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Well I have had a look at this Claff data in practice, and as I suspected it is taking the sensors response to a particular test, and then applying the results across the board. ( To be fair to Claff he seems to be just stating the fact of read noise vs ISO - it's others that are drawing 'practical" conclusions form the data).

In terms of the 5Dmk2, ISO 160 does not give the highest image quality. When under exposed in a 16 bit tiff file it is true that blacks and greys show smoother data when pushed from ISO 160, with a fraction less luminance noise. However the chroma noise in the colour data is worse than ISO 100, as is everything else. Don't even mention ISO 640.

Classic case of producing data from an empirical experiment and then other observers drawing erroneous conclusions from it.
 
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To the iso darkroom tester:

Dont do this test with a lens that is faster than f2.8 (or not stopped down) cause Canon does strange stuff to get the brightness level properly under 2.8 (cause film collects the light which comes in at certain angles better than sensor)
 
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Sella174 said:
neuroanatomist said:
If you look at Bill Claff's data for Canon sensors ...

Hey, my 30D has at ISO160 the lowest noise of all the Canon cameras, apart from some 1D-series at lower ISO. Unbelievable!

And yet when we used one at Building Panoramics to shoot skys for our library the 30D produced more noisy images than any other Canon camera we have used, including the 20D.

This read noise / ISO data is being taken out of practical context.
 
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Just a little background here.

"ISO" is an intialism that stands for an international standards body.

There is no property of photographic film or of a digital imaging chain whose actual designation is "ISO".

The ISO publishes various standards that give ways of stating what we might call the "sensitivity" of a photographic film or of a digital imaging chain.

With regard to film, the basic sensitivity metric, determined as prescribed by the appropriate ISO standard, is called the ISO speed. The name of course comes from the fact that with film of a higher sensitivity, an appropriate exposure (for given scene luminance and given aperture) is given by a shorter exposure - a "faster" exposure process.

To provide continuity with practice in the film realm, the basic metric for the sensitivity of a digital imaging chain is also called the ISO speed. (It is of course determined in a wholly different way.)

Putting aside some complications, the basic "equation" we use (for example, in an exposure meter or automatic exposure control system) to arrive at a "recommended" photographic exposure (that is, combination of exposure time and aperture) for a given scene luminance, taking into account the sensitivity of the film or digital imaging chain (as its ISO speed) is the same for either medium.

But, especially taking into account the greater sophistication of modern exposure metering and control systems, it was observed that, in the case of digital cameras, this equation typically led to a lesser exposure than was "optimal" - typically about 1/2 stop "short". This gives a less-good noise result than we might actually enjoy.

Camera manufactures could have "tweaked" the operation of their exposure control systems to "take advantage" of this in two ways:

a. Change the "equation" used for automatic exposure control.

b. Keep the equation the same but "rate" the sensor system at a lesser ISO speed than would be determined by the ISO test method.

Had they done (a), the result would have been that the internal automatic exposure system would have produced a different exposure for a given shot than would have been "recommended" by a properly-calibrated free-standing exposure meter. This would have led to complaints about "inaccuracy" of the exposure control system of the camera.

So they did (b) instead.

But of course this led knowledgeable enthusiasts to complain that the "ISO speed ratings" of the digital camera were incorrect.

So the ISO defined a new metric for the sensitivity of a digital camera chain, the ISO standard output sensitivity (ISO SOS). This is a different measure than the ISO speed. In fact, again putting aside some complications, for a given sensor chain, the ISO SOS is about "1/2 stop" less than the ISO speed. (That is, the ISO SOS is about 0.7 times the ISO speed.)

And that "solved" the problem!

Today, the sensitivity of many digital cameras is stated in terms of the ISO SOS, not the ISO speed (and that often is stated in the "specifications", although it is sometimes hard to find).

Now for a second chapter of this story, i must refer to the matter of exposure index. For our purposes we can say that exposure index is "what we tell the exposure meter is the ISO speed of the film of digital camera chain".

Going back to traditional analog exposure meters, we recall that if we want to bump the exposure the meter recommends for some reason (compensate for backlighting, perhaps), we can set the "ISO speed" dial to a lower value than the actual ISO speed of the film or digital sensor. And of course, what we set on that little dial is the exposure index (and, as I just illustrated, it is not always the ISO speed of the film or digital sensor chain).

Now, returning to recent developments in the description of digital camera sensitivity, when the ISO introduced the ISO SOS, it also introduced another new "metric", the ISO Recommended Exposure Index (ISO REI).

This is a metric that works the same way as the ISO speed or ISO SOS (as a parameter of the exposure equation). It is defined as (and I paraphrase) "the exposure index that the camera manufacturer feels will, as an input to the exposure equation, give a 'desirable' exposure result in many cases."

In many case, digital camera manufacturers now indicate that the sensitivity "ratings" of their camera (at its various "ISO" settings) are in terms of ISO REI. That is, there is not any way that these values can be "correct" of "incorrect".

As a practical matter, in most of these cases, the "ISO" ratings are actually intended to be the ISO SOS values (and often turn out to closely conform to that definition), but the manufacturers do not care to commit to that.

A more extensive discussion of this matter is given here:

http://dougkerr.net/pumpkin/articles/SOS_REI.pdf

Best regards,

Doug
 
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