Still waiting for high MP canon while Nikon is coming out with new 800

Orangutan said:
Um, if you're excluding the light outside the center (crop-equivalent) area, you're not comparing a FF to a crop-frame; you're comparing a crop-frame to a crop-frame.

More correct would be say that one is comparing a crop of a "full-frame" sensor to a "crop-frame" sensor.

Orangutan said:
The comparison is absolutely meaningless unless you compare the full area of the FF against the full area of the crop-frame.

But even that is a meaningless comparison, because a "full-frame" sensor is physically larger in area than a "crop-frame" sensor and thus always illuminated by more light. For this type of comparison to have any real meaning, the two sensors must be normalized ... somehow.
 
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Sella174 said:
Orangutan said:
The comparison is absolutely meaningless unless you compare the full area of the FF against the full area of the crop-frame.

But even that is a meaningless comparison, because a "full-frame" sensor is physically larger in area than a "crop-frame" sensor and thus always illuminated by more light. For this type of comparison to have any real meaning, the two sensors must be normalized ... somehow.

That's precisely why it's meaninFUL. The defining characteristic of a full-frame sensor is that it has dimensions equal to a full frame of 35mm film. If you want to compare sensor technologies, then the size of the sensor is less imporant. If you want to compare a FF camera to an APS-C camera, then it's essential to include the entire area of each because those are the defining characteristics of each.

So what's your intention? Are you comparing sensor tech or actual cameras with FF and APS-C sensors?
 
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Sella174 said:
Orangutan said:
Orangutan said:
The comparison is absolutely meaningless unless you compare the full area of the FF against the full area of the crop-frame.

But even that is a meaningless comparison, because a "full-frame" sensor is physically larger in area than a "crop-frame" sensor and thus always illuminated by more light. For this type of comparison to have any real meaning, the two sensors must be normalized ... somehow.

The comparison isn't meaningless - rather, it demonstrates the point: it's why, given the current state of technology, FF sensors are better than APS-C, which in turn are better than 1" sensors, which in turn are better than.... You just don't like the comparison because it doesn't support your argument (to the extent it's clear what that is). That doesn't make it meaningless. You might as well say it's "meaningless" to compare a tripod to a monopod because it has more legs.
 
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sdsr said:
The comparison isn't meaningless - rather, it demonstrates the point: it's why, given the current state of technology, FF sensors are better than APS-C, which in turn are better than 1" sensors, which in turn are better than.... You just don't like the comparison because it doesn't support your argument (to the extent it's clear what that is). That doesn't make it meaningless. You might as well say it's "meaningless" to compare a tripod to a monopod because it has more legs.

You misunderstood my post: it's entirely meaningful to compare sensor tech vs. sensor tech -- I got no problem with that. The problem is when you call it a comparison between FF and APS-C: that's just lazy use of language.

If Sella wanted to compare tech he should have said so, but he used the term "full frame;" by definition, that is a sensor with dimensions equal to a frame of 35mm film. That is the defining characteristic of "full-frame."

Perhaps you think I'm mincing words, but no: both discussions are valid, but they are entirely different discussions.

If you and Sella want to talk sensor tech then we'll talk sensor tech.

If you want to talk FF vs. APS-C then we'll include full illumination of both.

Sloppiness does not help Sella's dwindling credibility.
 
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dilbert said:
Just because a sensor is larger doesn't mean it has less noise and indeed, if you were to take two sensors that used pixels of the same design then both sensors would have equal noise.

If you want to print lets say a 10" by 15" picture of a small sensor you have to enlarge it more. The difference is 1.6*1.6 = 2.56x (Canon APS-C versus FF). What kind of effect do you think that has on the visibility of noise?
 
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Sella174 said:
neuroanatomist said:
So you're wrong even about your own behavior. Interesting.

OK, since my understanding is apparently wrong ... and I want to learn.

Given a "full-frame" sensor and a "crop-frame" sensor, made of the same "sensor technology", i.e. same size photosites, same A/D converter, same everything except area.

The statement is that a "full-frame" sensor gathers more total light than a "crop-frame" sensor.

Explain to me how and why the "full-frame" sensor collects more light in the centre area of the same equivalent size as the "crop-frame" sensor, than does the "crop-frame" sensor; or, stated differently, how and why does light falling in the area on the "full-frame" sensor outside the "crop-frame" equivalent centre area affect the amount of light gather within the designated centre area of the "full-frame" sensor, thereby causing said designated centre area of the "full-frame" sensor to gather more light than the "crop-frame" sensor.

The amount of light gathered by 'center area' (APS-C sized region) of a FF sensor is obviously identical to the total light gathered by an APS-C sensor (assuming equivalent design, i.e., microlenses). If they have identical pixel pitch, image quality would be the same. So, if you're going to take every image from the FF sensor in this example and crop it to the APS-C FoV, there's no advantage to the larger sensor. I can't speak for you or anyone else, but personally I don't shoot images planning to crop away ~60% of each image I capture. If that's the sort of 'normalized comparison' you have in mind, it's one with no practical relevance. You may as well extract one pixel from the image and say it's as good as the whole picture.

When you compare the sensors without cropping, the total light gathered by the larger sensor is greater...simple geometry, as you say. When comparing pictures (not pixels), the larger sensor will deliver a sharper image with less noise, given the same pixel pitch and sensor technology.

In several threads, you've made the point that when comparing sensor sizes, the 'crop factor' does not affect exposure. In other words, an f/2 lens on FF, APS-C, m4/3, or even a 1/1.7" sensor like in the PowerShot S-series will yield the same exposure, e.g. shooting a gray card at f/2 and ISO 200, a metered exposure on FF of 1/100 s would give the same 1/100 s exposure on all of those successively smaller sensors. That's absolutely true. But above, you acknowledged that larger sensors gather more total light. Hopefully you see the confound - same aperture, shutter speed, and ISO giving the same exposure (assuming equally accurate metering), resulting in the same brightness of the resulting images from each sensor...but very different amounts of total light gathered. How does that work?

The answer lies in what ISO is...and isn't. Many people have a poor understanding of ISO, incorrectly assuming that a given ISO setting means a fixed amount of gain applied to the signal. ISO is a standard (that's the 'S' in ISO, ISO 12232 is the relevant standard in this case), and that standard effectively means that for a given exposure setting in terms of aperture and shutter speed, the resulting image will have a defined brightness. How does an image taken at f/2, 1/100 s, ISO 200 on a PowerShot S100 have the same brightness as an image at f/2, 1/100 s, ISO 200 on a FF sensor, even though the FF sensor is over 20 times larger? More amplification (gain) must be applied to the lower total signal from the smaller sensor. More amplification means more noise. Obviously, the same is true for m4/3 and APS-C relative to FF, to a progressively lesser degree. Likewise, a medium format sensor needs less amplification than a FF sensor to achieve the necessary brightness for a given ISO according to the standard, and therefore has less noise than FF.

So, even though using a smaller sensor doesn't affect 'exposure', the less total light gathered means a lower signal that must be amplified more compared to a larger sensor to achieve the same resulting brightness according to the ISO standard, and more amplification means more noise. You may think that getting the 'same exposure' with a smaller sensor despite collecting less total light comes without a penalty, but like many things in life, there's no free lunch.

When considering a fixed output size (viewing the entire image on the same display or printing at the same size), the smaller the sensor the more enlargement needed. That results in the image from the smaller sensor appearing less sharp. In addition to sharpness, although the extra enlargement technically doesn't add noise, it does enhance the appearance of the existing noise, further adding to the perceived noise from the smaller sensor.
 
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Orangutan said:
sdsr said:
The comparison isn't meaningless - rather, it demonstrates the point: it's why, given the current state of technology, FF sensors are better than APS-C, which in turn are better than 1" sensors, which in turn are better than.... You just don't like the comparison because it doesn't support your argument (to the extent it's clear what that is). That doesn't make it meaningless. You might as well say it's "meaningless" to compare a tripod to a monopod because it has more legs.

You misunderstood my post: it's entirely meaningful to compare sensor tech vs. sensor tech -- I got no problem with that. The problem is when you call it a comparison between FF and APS-C: that's just lazy use of language.

If Sella wanted to compare tech he should have said so, but he used the term "full frame;" by definition, that is a sensor with dimensions equal to a frame of 35mm film. That is the defining characteristic of "full-frame."

Perhaps you think I'm mincing words, but no: both discussions are valid, but they are entirely different discussions.

If you and Sella want to talk sensor tech then we'll talk sensor tech.

If you want to talk FF vs. APS-C then we'll include full illumination of both.

Sloppiness does not help Sella's dwindling credibility.

Ummm ... I thought I understood your post; the point of mine was to agree with you and disagree with Sella! Perhaps I should take a nap....
 
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sdsr said:
Orangutan said:
sdsr said:
The comparison isn't meaningless - rather, it demonstrates the point: it's why, given the current state of technology, FF sensors are better than APS-C, which in turn are better than 1" sensors, which in turn are better than.... You just don't like the comparison because it doesn't support your argument (to the extent it's clear what that is). That doesn't make it meaningless. You might as well say it's "meaningless" to compare a tripod to a monopod because it has more legs.

You misunderstood my post: it's entirely meaningful to compare sensor tech vs. sensor tech -- I got no problem with that. The problem is when you call it a comparison between FF and APS-C: that's just lazy use of language.

If Sella wanted to compare tech he should have said so, but he used the term "full frame;" by definition, that is a sensor with dimensions equal to a frame of 35mm film. That is the defining characteristic of "full-frame."

Perhaps you think I'm mincing words, but no: both discussions are valid, but they are entirely different discussions.

If you and Sella want to talk sensor tech then we'll talk sensor tech.

If you want to talk FF vs. APS-C then we'll include full illumination of both.

Sloppiness does not help Sella's dwindling credibility.

Ummm ... I thought I understood your post; the point of mine was to agree with you and disagree with Sella! Perhaps I should take a nap....

My bad: I thought you were replying to me.
 
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Orangutan said:
If you want to compare sensor technologies, then the size of the sensor is less imporant. If you want to compare a FF camera to an APS-C camera, then it's essential to include the entire area of each because those are the defining characteristics of each.

So what's your intention? Are you comparing sensor tech or actual cameras with FF and APS-C sensors?

I am comparing sensor technology, whilst neuroanatomist responds by comparing actual camera sensors. Very confusing.
 
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Orangutan said:
If Sella wanted to compare tech he should have said so, but he used the term "full frame;" by definition, that is a sensor with dimensions equal to a frame of 35mm film. That is the defining characteristic of "full-frame."

It is in truth neuroanatomist who keeps insisting that a sensor of "full-frame" size has better "characteristics" than an equal sensor of "crop-frame" size, e.g.

neuroanatomist said:
You're suggesting that if I crop an APS-C FoV from a shot with my 1D X, that the IQ of the resulting 7 MP image will be the same as the IQ an uncropped image (assuming I adjusted the framing with a zoom lens or changing the distance). Sorry, that's simply not true.

???
 
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Sella174 said:
dilbert said:
Just because a sensor is larger doesn't mean it has less noise and indeed, if you were to take two sensors that used pixels of the same design then both sensors would have equal noise.
But is that not what I've been saying all this time?

Yes, you've been saying that...and you're wrong. Using a statement by dilbert to support your own viewpoint isn't wise – his grasp of facts is tenuous at best (for example, he once posted a picture of what he thought was a camera, but was actually a lens). Actually, you two seem to have some things in common...poor understanding of technology and business principles and refusal to admit mistakes, to name a few.


Sella174 said:
It is in truth neuroanatomist who keeps insisting that a sensor of "full-frame" size has better "characteristics" than an equal sensor of "crop-frame" size, e.g.

Who's incorrectly attributing statements now? ::)

A sensor of full frame size does produce better image quality than an APS-C sensor, given pixels of the same design, for the reasons described in my detailed explanation above (more gain must be applied to the smaller sensor).

Comparing the same sized patch of area on two different sized sensors with identical pixel design is completely pointless.
 
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Sella174 said:
Orangutan said:
So what's your intention? Are you comparing sensor tech or actual cameras with FF and APS-C sensors?

I am comparing sensor technology, whilst neuroanatomist responds by comparing actual camera sensors. Very confusing.

No, you said this:

Sella174 said:
Given a "full-frame" sensor and a "crop-frame" sensor, made of the same "sensor technology", i.e. same size photosites, same A/D converter, same everything except area.

The statement is that a "full-frame" sensor gathers more total light than a "crop-frame" sensor.

Then you went on to discuss the center area of the FF, so I corrected you.

You are very sloppy and imprecise in your use of language. Remember, on the interwebs non-verbal cues are not readily available so you need to be careful with your words.
 
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neuroanatomist said:
The answer lies in what ISO is...and isn't. Many people have a poor understanding of ISO, incorrectly assuming that a given ISO setting means a fixed amount of gain applied to the signal. ISO is a standard (that's the 'S' in ISO, ISO 12232 is the relevant standard in this case), and that standard effectively means that for a given exposure setting in terms of aperture and shutter speed, the resulting image will have a defined brightness. How does an image taken at f/2, 1/100 s, ISO 200 on a PowerShot S100 have the same brightness as an image at f/2, 1/100 s, ISO 200 on a FF sensor, even though the FF sensor is over 20 times larger? More amplification (gain) must be applied to the lower total signal from the smaller sensor. More amplification means more noise. Obviously, the same is true for m4/3 and APS-C relative to FF, to a progressively lesser degree. Likewise, a medium format sensor needs less amplification than a FF sensor to achieve the necessary brightness for a given ISO according to the standard, and therefore has less noise than FF.

Interesting. So how did ISO work with film ? Was 50 ISO 120 roll film a different emulsion to 50 ISO 35mm ? How did 645 framing on 120 expose the same as 6x7 or even 6x9 ?
 
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Sporgon said:
neuroanatomist said:
The answer lies in what ISO is...and isn't. Many people have a poor understanding of ISO, incorrectly assuming that a given ISO setting means a fixed amount of gain applied to the signal. ISO is a standard (that's the 'S' in ISO, ISO 12232 is the relevant standard in this case), and that standard effectively means that for a given exposure setting in terms of aperture and shutter speed, the resulting image will have a defined brightness. How does an image taken at f/2, 1/100 s, ISO 200 on a PowerShot S100 have the same brightness as an image at f/2, 1/100 s, ISO 200 on a FF sensor, even though the FF sensor is over 20 times larger? More amplification (gain) must be applied to the lower total signal from the smaller sensor. More amplification means more noise. Obviously, the same is true for m4/3 and APS-C relative to FF, to a progressively lesser degree. Likewise, a medium format sensor needs less amplification than a FF sensor to achieve the necessary brightness for a given ISO according to the standard, and therefore has less noise than FF.

Interesting. So how did ISO work with film ? Was 50 ISO 120 roll film a different emulsion to 50 ISO 35mm ? How did 645 framing on 120 expose the same as 6x7 or even 6x9 ?
I believe it was the same emulsion for any size film but the difference was the 35mm film was more grainy than MF because it was enlarged much much more.
 
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dilbert said:
100 said:
dilbert said:
Just because a sensor is larger doesn't mean it has less noise and indeed, if you were to take two sensors that used pixels of the same design then both sensors would have equal noise.

If you want to print lets say a 10" by 15" picture of a small sensor you have to enlarge it more. The difference is 1.6*1.6 = 2.56x (Canon APS-C versus FF). What kind of effect do you think that has on the visibility of noise?

What you will see won't be noise but the bi-cubic or whatever method used to invent pixels for the printer to print.

I’m not talking about inventing and adding more pixels to a picture.
Just print the existing pixels of both sensors (FF and APS-C) to the same size photograph.

If both cameras have the same amount of pixels than the pixels of the FF camera are larger. Because of that they gather more light per pixel which leads to less noise in the end result.

If both cameras have the same size pixels, than the noise per pixel will be exactly the same, but the APS-C camera will have 2.56 times less pixels, so all pixels (including the noisy ones) have to be enlarged 2.56 times more to get to the same size photograph. You will end up with less resolution and the noise will be more visible.

In the end the FF sensor will give you a cleaner (less noisy) picture than APS-C when printed at the same size (or looked at on the same size screen).
 
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Sella174 said:
traingineer said:
Honestly Sella, are you trying to be the representative of the niche of the niche of the niche group? The group of Canon users who, just will not agree to anything or anyone and want the most bizarre products to be produced by Canon, and only make up 0.00............1% of Canon users?

Read what I wrote, not what others told you that I wrote. Then learn to think for yourself, instead of having others think for you.

Finished? Now go look up the profit Canon's photographic division made last year and calculate what is 1% (the figure you so randomly plucked from others' posts) of that amount. That is the amount of additional money Canon could have made on each and every product made specially for us "niche of a niche of a niche 1% group of Canon users". Instead, we're spending that amount as a baseline elsewhere.

Think for yourself. Am I right or am I wrong?

I have been reading what you wrote throughout this entire thread, and I didn't say 1%, I decided to go with 0.000001% and my answer is around 1500-3000$. Which I don't think would really benefit Canon at all.
 
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traingineer said:
Sella174 said:
traingineer said:
Honestly Sella, are you trying to be the representative of the niche of the niche of the niche group? The group of Canon users who, just will not agree to anything or anyone and want the most bizarre products to be produced by Canon, and only make up 0.00............1% of Canon users?

Read what I wrote, not what others told you that I wrote. Then learn to think for yourself, instead of having others think for you.


Finished? Now go look up the profit Canon's photographic division made last year and calculate what is 1% (the figure you so randomly plucked from others' posts) of that amount. That is the amount of additional money Canon could have made on each and every product made specially for us "niche of a niche of a niche 1% group of Canon users". Instead, we're spending that amount as a baseline elsewhere.

Think for yourself. Am I right or am I wrong?

I have been reading what you wrote throughout this entire thread, and I didn't say 1%, I decided to go with 0.000001% and my answer is around 1500-3000$. Which I don't think would really benefit Canon at all.

I suppose you have to take that $1500 to $3000 and subtract the costs of R&D, manufacturing, marketing, and surely plenty of other costs I'm not thinking about at the moment. Looks pretty bleak pretty quickly.
 
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ajperk said:
traingineer said:
Sella174 said:
traingineer said:
Honestly Sella, are you trying to be the representative of the niche of the niche of the niche group? The group of Canon users who, just will not agree to anything or anyone and want the most bizarre products to be produced by Canon, and only make up 0.00............1% of Canon users?

Read what I wrote, not what others told you that I wrote. Then learn to think for yourself, instead of having others think for you.


Finished? Now go look up the profit Canon's photographic division made last year and calculate what is 1% (the figure you so randomly plucked from others' posts) of that amount. That is the amount of additional money Canon could have made on each and every product made specially for us "niche of a niche of a niche 1% group of Canon users". Instead, we're spending that amount as a baseline elsewhere.

Think for yourself. Am I right or am I wrong?

I have been reading what you wrote throughout this entire thread, and I didn't say 1%, I decided to go with 0.000001% and my answer is around 1500-3000$. Which I don't think would really benefit Canon at all.

I suppose you have to take that $1500 to $3000 and subtract the costs of R&D, manufacturing, marketing, and surely plenty of other costs I'm not thinking about at the moment. Looks pretty bleak pretty quickly.

Definitely.
 
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