A quote from this article https://photographylife.com/sraw-format-explained
"As you can see, Canon’s sRAW and mRAW files are simply down-sampled images from the original full-resolution RAW files. If you were to take a RAW file, then down-sample it yourself in Photoshop, you would get a similar result. Except you would have the full RAW file data to work with in wide gamut color space, while sRAW actually strips out a lot of information. So sRAW is actually not anything like the original RAW file!"
This is my exact experience. "So sRAW (and MRAW) is actually not anything like the original RAW file!" I tried shooting in MRaw and SRAW on my 5DII and made adjustments in LR and it was very crappy. So shoot in the full RAW, make adjustments in LR and then down-sample in LR to the MRAW or SRAW size and it is good. The same thing should happen with the 5DS except the file size is bigger to begin with so the down-sampled image should be great.
"As you can see, Canon’s sRAW and mRAW files are simply down-sampled images from the original full-resolution RAW files. If you were to take a RAW file, then down-sample it yourself in Photoshop, you would get a similar result. Except you would have the full RAW file data to work with in wide gamut color space, while sRAW actually strips out a lot of information. So sRAW is actually not anything like the original RAW file!"
This is my exact experience. "So sRAW (and MRAW) is actually not anything like the original RAW file!" I tried shooting in MRaw and SRAW on my 5DII and made adjustments in LR and it was very crappy. So shoot in the full RAW, make adjustments in LR and then down-sample in LR to the MRAW or SRAW size and it is good. The same thing should happen with the 5DS except the file size is bigger to begin with so the down-sampled image should be great.
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