privatebydesign said:bdunbar79 said:Can I get some credit here?? In the post that the OP is speaking of, I DID tell dilbert he was wrong!![]()
We give you credit
Now go and fix that 400 mount![]()
:'(
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privatebydesign said:bdunbar79 said:Can I get some credit here?? In the post that the OP is speaking of, I DID tell dilbert he was wrong!![]()
We give you credit
Now go and fix that 400 mount![]()
MxM said:IThe golden rule is that the limit is MP/MB+1(file size) so 19MB is in the safe/clean zone and 20MB is pushing your camera. It's no math, just hard numbers.
MxM
Click said:Very interesting thread. I'm following this closely. Thanks for the great info. 8)
MxM said:As you can see is ISO 160, 320, 640 the camera's sweet-spot...
MxM said:I did an ISO test with my 7D.
Put the camera in a dark room (basement) leave the lenscap on, close/block the viewfinder, use RAW or disable ISO long exposure/noise reduction. Choose the settings that you want (Manual mode). Take every picture for at least 10 seconds and you will come up with al list like me.
![]()
The 7D is an 18MP camera which is equal to approx. 18MB file size. (the smaller the file size, the cleaner the image is)
As you can see is ISO 160, 320, 640 the camera's sweet-spot... The golden rule is that the limit is MP/MB+1(file size) so 19MB is in the safe/clean zone and 20MB is pushing your camera. It's no math, just hard numbers.
MxM
privatebydesign said:Pi and Sporgon, you are missing the point.
privatebydesign said:Pi and Sporgon, you are missing the point.
The point is that the read noise displayed is added to a regular shot in lesser amounts at shorter exposures. You can argue the relevance, but when you are trying to pull that last bit of detail from a dark shadow that tiny extra amount of noise might make the difference.
It is all about setting yourself up to get the last 1 or 2 % of your sensors capabilities, this small difference is best illustrated with long dark exposures, but is just as valid for shorter brighter ones.
privatebydesign said:So your recommendation is full iso stops and expose to the right, isn't that basic knowledge and in agreement with the article?
Then, what is the best ISO?
To the best of my knowledge, the best ISOs are the ones available in recent Magic Lantern versions (April 2012 or later), obtained from ISO 100 multiples adjusted with a small amount of negative digital gain:
* ISO 85, 175, 350, 700, 1400, 2800 - best for Neutral -4 and other low-contrast styles.
* ISO 80, 160, 320, 640, 1250, 2500 - good for a wide range of situations.
* ISO 70, 140, 280, 560, 1100, 2200 - best for high-contrast styles.
neuroanatomist said:There are basically three 'types' of ISOs:
- Base ISO - this is the 'real' ISO for the sensor before any amplificaition. For most sensors, this is actually in the ISO 60 to ISO 80 range, not ISO 100 as many people assume.
- Native ISOs - analog amplification applied to the base signal, prior to analog to digital conversion (ADC). These values have numbers for selection (e.g. ISO 3200)
- Expanded ISOs - digital amplification applied to the signal after the maximum analog amplification, occurring after the ADC. These valuse have letters for selection (L, H1, etc.).
You're talking about 'tweener' ISOs - those are seen in some cameras but not others. Some analog amplifiers (most of them, for Canon sensors, actually) are only capable of full stop incremental amplification, so digital amplification (pushing/pulling occurring after the ADC) is applied to the signal after the 'native' full-stop analog amplification. If you look at Bill Claff's data for Canon sensors, you can see the zig-zag curves that result from these 'tweener' ISO settings, with all their cameras except the 1D X.
So, dilbert is wrong about the 5DII's ISO settings - ISO 6400 is the highest 'real' (aka native) ISO. He may be confused because ISO 3200 is the highest available ISO when ISO is set to Auto. I have no idea what he means by stating, " Once the ISO is past the point where IQ drops more than 1 stop per ISO stop" - what the heck is '1 stop of IQ'?!? Last time I checked, IQ was not measured in stops anywhere outside of dilbert-land (a fanciful place where lenses are sometimes cameras). But the reality is, noise and DR scale linearly in the 5DII from ISO 1600 all the way through H2, so the 'IQ difference' between ISO 1600 and ISO 3200 is the same as the difference between ISO 3200 and ISO 6400.
Having said that, the highest ISO one will use is a personal judgement call. With the 5DII, ISO 3200 was my highest setting for non-emergency use (but that doesn't make ISO 6400 'not real' - it's still a native ISO setting).
Valvebounce said:WOW
Thanks guys for all the answers, I am going to confess that I am still unclear as to where my native (real to use my incorrect description) iso's run out and when they become expanded, is it in theory the one before H, or is it in multiples of the base iso, 60 to 80 which I also don't know for the 7D! Or is it still best to work in multiples of the lowest selectable iso of 100 (no L setting on 7D)?
Thanks to Neuro for his in depth answer, perhaps I should have asked for the simplified version, might make more sense when less tired and stressed!
Really enjoy reading this forum, not sure how much is going to stick.
So much info so little ram left I wonder what just got over written!
Cheers, Graham.
MxM said:I did an ISO test with my 7D.
Put the camera in a dark room (basement) leave the lenscap on, close/block the viewfinder, use RAW or disable ISO long exposure/noise reduction. Choose the settings that you want (Manual mode). Take every picture for at least 10 seconds and you will come up with al list like me.
![]()
The 7D is an 18MP camera which is equal to approx. 18MB file size. (the smaller the file size, the cleaner the image is)
As you can see is ISO 160, 320, 640 the camera's sweet-spot... The golden rule is that the limit is MP/MB+1(file size) so 19MB is in the safe/clean zone and 20MB is pushing your camera. It's no math, just hard numbers.
MxM
privatebydesign said:The 7D's best iso level, the one with least noise, is 160iso; 100 and 200 are a touch noisier, then 318 and 126, then 251 and then they all get progressively more noisy.
So for shooting photos the "best" iso would be 160, as you needed more go up 1/3rd to 200[...]
Pi said:privatebydesign said:The 7D's best iso level, the one with least noise, is 160iso; 100 and 200 are a touch noisier, then 318 and 126, then 251 and then they all get progressively more noisy.
So for shooting photos the "best" iso would be 160, as you needed more go up 1/3rd to 200[...]
This is wrong. ISO 160 is pushed ISO 200 by 1/3 stop (ETTR). You can push ISO 100 to ISO 80, if you want. ISO 100 and ISO 200 have the same shadow noise but away from the shadows, ISO gets better and better, up to 2.6 dB better at the top. Nowhere in the range is ISO 200 better.
The illusion of the "better" ISO 160 comes from the hidden overexposure by 1/3 stop. That does not change the DR; in fact, the DR at ISO 200 (or 160) is slightly worse than at ISO 100.
But higher shot noise above the shadows, per DXOmark. This makes the statement that ISO 160 is better incorrect. It has to be better everywhere, to be declared better.privatebydesign said:Pi said:privatebydesign said:The 7D's best iso level, the one with least noise, is 160iso; 100 and 200 are a touch noisier, then 318 and 126, then 251 and then they all get progressively more noisy.
So for shooting photos the "best" iso would be 160, as you needed more go up 1/3rd to 200[...]
This is wrong. ISO 160 is pushed ISO 200 by 1/3 stop (ETTR). You can push ISO 100 to ISO 80, if you want. ISO 100 and ISO 200 have the same shadow noise but away from the shadows, ISO gets better and better, up to 2.6 dB better at the top. Nowhere in the range is ISO 200 better.
The illusion of the "better" ISO 160 comes from the hidden overexposure by 1/3 stop. That does not change the DR; in fact, the DR at ISO 200 (or 160) is slightly worse than at ISO 100.
Well if you take empirical measurements, or read the page that was linked to http://home.comcast.net/~NikonD70/Charts/RN_ADU.htm you would see that the 7D has the lowest read noise at iso 159 (160).
If you look further on the site you will find this page http://home.comcast.net/~NikonD70/Charts/PDR.htm this measures DR to be the same at 100 and 200 iso, well within 0.01 of a stop.
This makes the statement that ISO 160 is better incorrect. It has to be better everywhere, to be declared better.