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Archive 2017 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!

  
 
zhangyue
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p.44 #1 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


Steve Spencer wrote:
Michael, what you wrote here isn't true on several levels. First William Klaff's site is not at the pixel level and does normalize the numbers to equate on output size. Read the details of how the numbers are computed and that is made clear. Second, the D850 does not have more DR than any of the miniMF sensors. They don't have much more but they do have about a quarter of a stop more. The D850 has a great sensor. For low ISO shooting probably the best FF 35mm sensor, but let's not overstate how good it is.


Hi, Steve, Just have time to reply you. thanks for point out error on my side. I couldn't find information about Claff's DR is at pixel level or normalized. but I think you were right given the fact for the same camera has less DR at DX mode than FF. This is the 2nd time I am confused with Claff's measurement I think.

As D850 has better DR than other miniMF, I revisit the DXO sensor score and compare the two they have D850 and X1D. (they seems don't have GFX50 and 645Z)

Here are the comparison I got:
screen
Screen Shot 2017-10-28 at 11.34.03 PM by ZHNL, on Flickr
D850 is 13.55EV, X1D is 13.49EV
Print
Screen Shot 2017-10-28 at 11.34.26 PM by ZHNL, on Flickr
For print, because X1D has more pixel, so it break even now with very minor advantage.
D850 is 14.81EV, X1D is 14.83EV, but it doesn't have high ISO capability of D850.

There should be negligible difference between DXO and Claff measurement difference other than DXO use 0dB as base and Claff use 20dB as base for SNR measurement.

Before DXO measure X1D sensor, actually there is only one place I can find technical measurement for both D850 and miniMF sony sensor: irental (Largest rental company in China). Their past measurement are all with match DXO and Claff since they all measure raw data from sensor.

Here is their results for dynamic range:
1504864437869429 by ZHNL, on Flickr

For understanding this graph, I need explain what they did for this score. They use -6eV(raw data) and down sampling the sensor, until SNR=30dB, which they feel a good threshold for nice IQ for landscape. D750 need downsize until to 10M pixel to get SNR=30dB, D850 downsize until 17.77M. D810 downsize until 15.6M and GFX need downsize until 12.3M. A7R 9.79M, A7RII 8.75M etc...... if you use D750 as reference as score 100, you can get score by using equivalent pixels/10M(D750 results)X100=score.

This looks quite technical and complicated, but fundamentally, just another way to calibrate between sensor by using 30dB as threshold.

We are purely doing technical discuss here. I don't want make a big deal out of DR advantage between cameras. The bottom line is I didn't make false claim about my original post about D850 sensor is score higher than any other miniMF other than phase IQ3100. DXO now of course score X1D higher than D850 though we don't know how that score is calculated.

D850's sensor performance is so good doesn't come with a surprise that ISO64 at 45+M pixels (allow more light(signal) to captured) will compensate 1.5 size advantage of miniMF sensor size. and we all know Nikon is the one really know how to push design limit for given sensor.

Sorry for the OT.




Oct 29, 2017 at 02:24 AM
Pixel Perfect
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p.44 #2 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


PrecisionPhoto wrote:
https://www.sonyalpharumors.com/big-comparison-sony-a7r-iii-vs-5d-mark-iv-vs-nikon-d850-vs-fuji-gfx/
What's with the dot matrix in the 850 & A7RIII?


I love how supposedly 100% crops come out the same size. They could have at least tried to focus the Canon and Fuji.



Oct 29, 2017 at 03:23 AM
chris0202
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p.44 #3 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


Pixel Perfect wrote:
I love how supposedly 100% crops come out the same size. They could have at least tried to focus the Canon and Fuji.


The canon is enlarged beyond 100% to make it the same size. Af seems accurate as I checked original image. 5d4 has AA filter so it is not good for pixel peeping.

Fuji is slightly off.

I totally miss the point of adding a camera not marketed as high-res body in this comparison. They should put 5ds/r in it not 5d4.



Edited on Oct 29, 2017 at 05:51 AM · View previous versions



Oct 29, 2017 at 05:49 AM
Steve Spencer
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p.44 #4 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


zhangyue wrote:
Hi, Steve, Just have time to reply you. thanks for point out error on my side. I couldn't find information about Claff's DR is at pixel level or normalized. but I think you were right given the fact for the same camera has less DR at DX mode than FF. This is the 2nd time I am confused with Claff's measurement I think.

As D850 has better DR than other miniMF, I revisit the DXO sensor score and compare the two they have D850 and X1D. (they seems don't have GFX50 and 645Z)

Here are the comparison I got:
screen
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4443/24153544538_39ee082e68_b.jpgScreen by ZHNL, on Flickr
D850 is 13.55EV, X1D is 13.49EV
Print
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4504/24153544838_83b1771fcf_b.jpgScreen Shot 2017-10-28 at 11.34.26 PM by ZHNL, on Flickr
For print, because X1D has more pixel, so it break even now with very minor advantage.
D850 is 14.81EV, X1D is 14.83EV, but it doesn't have high ISO capability of D850.

There should be negligible difference between DXO and Claff measurement difference other than DXO use 0dB as base and Claff use 20dB as base for SNR measurement.

Before DXO measure X1D sensor, actually there is only one place I can find technical measurement for both D850 and miniMF sony sensor: irental (Largest rental company in China). Their past measurement are all with match DXO and Claff since they all measure raw data from sensor.

Here is their results for dynamic range:
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4494/38005212971_6ff2bc3324_b.jpg1504864437869429 by ZHNL, on Flickr

For understanding this graph, I need explain what they did for this score. They use -6eV(raw data) and down sampling the sensor, until SNR=30dB, which they feel a good threshold for nice IQ for landscape. D750 need downsize until to 10M pixel to get SNR=30dB, D850 downsize until 17.77M. D810 downsize until 15.6M and GFX need downsize until 12.3M. A7R 9.79M, A7RII 8.75M etc...... if you use D750 as reference as score 100, you can get score by using equivalent pixels/10M(D750 results)X100=score.

This looks quite technical and complicated, but fundamentally, just another way to calibrate between sensor by using 30dB as threshold.

We are purely doing technical discuss here. I don't want make a big deal out of DR advantage between cameras. The bottom line is I didn't make false claim about my original post about D850 sensor is score higher than any other miniMF other than phase IQ3100. DXO now of course score X1D higher than D850 though we don't know how that score is calculated.

D850's sensor performance is so good doesn't come with a surprise that ISO64 at 45+M pixels (allow more light(signal) to captured) will compensate 1.5 size advantage of miniMF sensor size. and we all know Nikon is the one really know how to push design limit for given sensor.

Sorry for the OT.

...Show more

Michael,

Thanks for this helpful information. Now that DXO has the data for the X1D we have a second sight that measures dynamic range. Bill Claff's site had the Mini MF sensors having about a quarter of a stop more dynamic range. DXO has them with equal measurements (note the print scores at DXO are the one that measure accounting for downsizing of the files whereas the screen scores are at the per pixel level). If you use the screen scores you often get surprising results like the D750 score considerably higher than the D850. Put simply the screen score are only useful if you are looking at both are 100% on the screen and are ignoring that the higher megapixel sensor is magnified more. So, DXO has a result quite similar to Bill Claff, but Claff has the difference being larger. Neither site suggests that the D850 has higher dynamic range.
Now let's talk about the Chinese site. I would not call what they did a measure of dynamic range if I understand it correctly, because it seems to just focus on shadow noise and does not take into account highlight room as well. You need both to measure dynamic range. I think of it more as a measure of shadow noise or perhaps the related construct of read noise (or how clean the image processing is). One thing is sure about that chart, it is very different from either Claff's or DXO's measures of dynamic range. Whatever it is measuring if seems to be a different construct as it isn't very closely related to other measures of dynamic range.
So, no doubt the D850 has great dynamic range. I don't think we should quibble about whether it has equal dynamic range to the X1D (as DXO suggests) or whether it has a quarter of a stop less (as Bill Claff suggests), but in any event they are close. I think we just shouldn't say that it has more dynamic range. I think that goes for the miniMF systems as well, if they have more it is such a small amount more it would hardly be noticeable.
What is more likely to be noticeable is noise. DXO and Bill Claff both agree that the MiniMF systems do much better at high ISO. Bill Claff has the X1D as doing about a stop better at high ISO, wheres DXO has it as a little more than half a stop, but either way the miniMF systems measured by both sites show a clear advantage for the miniMF systems at high ISO.
Ok, let me note one more fly in the ointment, aspect ratio. Even though miniMF sensors are at least equal on dynamic range that might not be true depending on the aspect ratio you want to use. If you crop to 3 X 2 or a skinnier rectangle you are cropping the MiniMF sensor more (of course you aren't cropping the D850 at all for 3 X 2) and that will affect dynamic range and noise. In fact, at a 3 X 2 crop the miniMF sensor has 45.4 megapixels, and have a touch less dynamic range. So for crops of 3 X 2 or a skinnier rectangle, the D850 is going to have ever so slightly more resolution and ever so slightly more dynamic range. Conversely, if you shoot at 4 X 3 or squarer you are cropping the 3 X 2 FF 35mm image more. In fact, at this crop the D850 only has 40.6 megapixels compared to the 51.1 megapixels for the miniMF camera. Here the difference in both resolution and DR is bigger and begin to be noticeable especially on bigger prints.
So, I think the answer is not a simple one, and I think it is misleading to say something like the D850 has better dynamic range than miniMF sensors. If you shoot in a 3 X 2 aspect ratio or a skinnier rectangle there might be a small advantage for the D850. If you shoot in 4 X 3 or squarer their might be a small advantage for miniMF.

In my own shooting comparing the Fuji GFX and the Sony A7r II, I see a small advantage for the Fuji even in 3 X 2 for dynamic range and this difference is a little bigger if you crop 4 X 3 or squarer, but I would say at the same time unless you are very very picky, I don't think this difference is large enough to offer very much in practical use for the miniMF system. Differences in lenses can easily overwhelm this difference and personally I make my decision which I use based on how far I have to schlep the gear. If I don't have to carry things far, I tend to shoot landscapes with the Fuji, but I often choose the Sony because it is so much easier to cart around. My advice to people thinking of switching to miniMF for increased resolution or dynamic range is be cautious. You can easily spend a lot of money and get very little if any benefit, especially if you shoot 3 X 2 or a skinnier rectangle for most of your shots, as many landscape shooters do. Now after the next generation of miniMF sensors I expect this to change, but even then don't expect huge gains from miniMF unless you prefer to shoot primarily 4 X 3. If you crop to 3 X 2 the miniMF sensor in size is less than half a stop bigger than FF 35mm if the sensors are equally dense and convert light to digital signal in the same way, and if you crop to 4 X 3 the miniMF sensor is still less than a stop bigger if you equalize the sensors. Given that FF 35mm sensors will likely always be ahead in terms of technology, the actual gains are likely to be smaller as we see above when comparing the D850 to the X1D.
Obviously, for me I got a GFX so I think it is worth getting, but if I only shot landscapes I don't think I would have gotten it. It is a great landscape camera, but so is my SonyA7r II and now the Sony A7r III and the gains for the Fuji are very small and I expect even with the next generation of sensors in everyday use they will rarely show a noticeable difference.


Oct 29, 2017 at 05:50 AM
chris0202
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p.44 #5 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


@Steve Spencer,

X1D's SNR and tonal range are clearly better. SNR is better by an entire stop. To me D850 is not in the same league when comes to final output.

Some of these concepts are often mixed together. Tonal range is more important here if you are concerned about exposure latitude, which is tonal range and DR combined.



Oct 29, 2017 at 05:57 AM
Steve Spencer
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p.44 #6 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


chris0202 wrote:
@Steve Spencer@,

X1D's SNR and tonal range are clearly better. SNR is better by an entire stop. To me D850 is not in the same league when comes to final output.

Some of these concepts are often mixed together. Tonal range is more important here if you are concerned about exposure latitude, which is tonal range and DR combined.


Well it depends on what you mean as clearly better. Yes, the X1D measures as doing better, but the differences as they would be seen in practical usage I think would be very small. Even the advantage in tonal range of the X1D is negated in large part by the lower base ISO of the D850. At base ISO, where many landscapers shoot the majority of their shots, the score on dynamic range are 14.81 vs. 14.83 EV in favour of the X1D and for tonal range 9.99 vs 10.1 bits, even as you combine these score for exposure latitude the difference is going to be very small and I doubt you would be able to see it very often if at all in every day use.



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:17 AM
johnctharp
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p.44 #7 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


This camera has me excited- Sony has been listening to their customers, and like Nikon with the D850, has distilled features typically used in their pro cameras down to their semipro line to better position with the 5D-series in terms of usability.

If speed of operation has been improved, then it may finally be time to start looking toward the A7-series as an all-around camera!

Edited on Oct 29, 2017 at 06:22 AM · View previous versions



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:20 AM
chris0202
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p.44 #8 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


@Steve Spencer

Each dB in SNR is 10 times the signal and each stop 2.

It is not percentage difference but by how many times.

DR is only luminance response of the sensor. Gradience is represented by tonal range.

Unless your image has only pure color, you should concern about tonal range.



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:21 AM
Steve Spencer
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p.44 #9 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


chris0202 wrote:
@Steve Spencer@

Each bit in SNR is 10 times the signal and each stop 2.

It is not percentage difference but by how many times.


Chris, first on SNR. As I mentioned the SNR difference is quite notable and Bill Claff measures it as about a stop, when I said DXO has it as about a half of a stop I was referring to the high ISO score, which they do have as about half a stop and not specifically to the SNR graph. There is a slight discrepancy there.

For tonal range 1/10th of a bit is pretty small any way you measure it and speaking of measurement, we don't know the error in measurement (i.e., the precision with which they it be measured) so that is one more reason to interpret such a small difference with caution.

Edited on Oct 29, 2017 at 06:33 AM · View previous versions



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:27 AM
chris0202
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p.44 #10 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


@Steve Spencer,

https://www.dxomark.com/Cameras/Compare/Side-by-side/Nikon-D850-versus-Hasselblad-X1D-50c___1177_1114

It is not small difference. Each bit is about 2 times. 0.3 bit is measured difference, which translate to 1.2 times stronger measured signal.

By the graph x1d's sensor is better by one stop of iso setting.



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:32 AM
Steve Spencer
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p.44 #11 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


chris0202 wrote:
@Steve Spencer@,

https://www.dxomark.com/Cameras/Compare/Side-by-side/Nikon-D850-versus-Hasselblad-X1D-50c___1177_1114

It is not small difference. Each bit is about 2 times. 0.3 bit is measured difference, which translate to 1.2 times stronger measured signal.

By the graph x1d's sensor is better by one stop of iso setting.


Not at base ISO, as I said at base ISO it is 9.99 bits vs. 10.1 or .11 bits to be exact, and of course we don't know the measurement error (i.e., how precisely these can be measured) so it is quite small. If we compare at the same ISO it is .3 bits, but many landscapers shoot at primarily base ISO so the comparison at the lowest ISO makes sense to a lot of people.



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:36 AM
chris0202
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p.44 #12 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


@Steve Spencer

Base iso difference is a usability thing. Indeed iso 64 is the strength of d850 which I will not deny. But when it comes to usability, many other factors are playing along.

Unless you are confident you won't go beyond base iso, it is something good to consider. Personally, only half of my shots are done near base iso.



Oct 29, 2017 at 06:43 AM
scrappydog
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p.44 #13 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


nandadevieast wrote:
Now that the 3 is out with same resolution as 2, I am wondering why someone who shoots MF lenses like CV or Loxi, will want to upgrade?


I was testing out my Voigtlander 65mm f/2 APO yesterday, which is hard to focus. I think the upgraded, higher resolution EVF could be useful for focusing MF lenses.



Oct 29, 2017 at 08:28 AM
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p.44 #14 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


scrappydog wrote:
I was testing out my Voigtlander 65mm f/2 APO yesterday, which is hard to focus. I think the upgraded, higher resolution EVF could be useful for focusing MF lenses.


What is your technique for focusing? I have not found it hard but then I usually use magnify and peaking. Agreed that a higher resolution EVF can only be a good thing.



Oct 29, 2017 at 09:48 AM
scrappydog
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p.44 #15 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


Luvwine wrote:
What is your technique for focusing? I have not found it hard but then I usually use magnify and peaking. Agreed that a higher resolution EVF can only be a good thing.


I sometimes look at the back screen or the viewfinder (depending on the conditions) and then zoom to 12.5x to get critical focus. I use focus peaking too. I will sometimes open up the lens, get critical focus, and then stop down. Yesterday, the sun was behind me so I had to look through the EVF and then block excess light with my loose hand.




Oct 29, 2017 at 10:22 AM
bclaff_too
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p.44 #16 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


Without clipping from a massive quote let me make some points that I think are relevant.

At PhotonsToPhotos the only charts that are pixel level are Read Noise and Input-Referred Read Noise.
The Photographic Dynamic Range (PDR) and Photographic Dynamic Range Shadow Improvement are normalized.

There is an important distinction between PDR and DxOMark Landsacpe score that goes beyond the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) threshhold.
DxOMark Landscape score is based entirely on Read Noise (which some people think of as SNR = 1).
PDR is based on a higher SNR (which is a function of pixel and sensor size).

To understand why this is important you need to understand Photon Transfer Curves (PTCs) and realize that DxOMark is based on the far left of this curve whereas PDR selects a point further up where photon noise is just starting to matter (remember we are trying to capture light, not total blackness).

The entire tail of the PTC goes up/down with the far left so these approaches usually correlate.
But there are some striking examples of the DxOMark approach going bad.
One is that they place the Nikon D7200, a DX camera, ahead of several FX cameras; PhotonsToPhotos does not.



Oct 29, 2017 at 10:39 AM
Steve Spencer
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p.44 #17 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


bclaff_too wrote:
Without clipping from a massive quote let me make some points that I think are relevant.

At PhotonsToPhotos the only charts that are pixel level are Read Noise and Input-Referred Read Noise.
The Photographic Dynamic Range (PDR) and Photographic Dynamic Range Shadow Improvement are normalized.

There is an important distinction between PDR and DxOMark Landsacpe score that goes beyond the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) threshhold.
DxOMark Landscape score is based entirely on Read Noise (which some people think of as SNR = 1).
PDR is based on a higher SNR (which is a function of pixel and sensor size).

To understand why this is important
...Show more

Thanks Bill and thanks for your work. The more I understand it the more I appreciate it.



Oct 29, 2017 at 10:49 AM
bclaff_too
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p.44 #18 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


I wanted to add separately that if you look closely at the DxOMark graphs there is some reason to doubt their measurements for the D850 (or at least to suspect they have been smoothed for reporting).

Specifically look at the Landscape Print curve and compare it with PhotonsToPhotos; see
www.photonstophotos.net/Charts/PDR.htm#Hasselblad%20X1D-50c,Nikon%20D850

Note that PDR goes up at ISO 400 because this is where the Nikon D850 invokes high conversion gain.
This correct behavior is not reflected in the DxOMark curve.



Oct 29, 2017 at 10:50 AM
bjornthun
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p.44 #19 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


bclaff_too wrote:
I wanted to add separately that if you look closely at the DxOMark graphs there is some reason to doubt their measurements for the D850 (or at least to suspect they have been smoothed for reporting).

Specifically look at the Landscape Print curve and compare it with PhotonsToPhotos; see
www.photonstophotos.net/Charts/PDR.htm#Hasselblad%20X1D-50c,Nikon%20D850

Note that PDR goes up at ISO 400 because this is where the Nikon D850 invokes high conversion gain.
This correct behavior is not reflected in the DxOMark curve.


Will you also do meassurements for the new pixel shift mode in the A7R3?



Oct 29, 2017 at 11:06 AM
alundeb
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p.44 #20 · Pre-orders open! Sony A7R III and FE 24-105mm f/4 OSS lens!


bclaff_too wrote:
Note that PDR goes up at ISO 400 because this is where the Nikon D850 invokes high conversion gain.
This correct behavior is not reflected in the DxOMark curve.


It is reflected in the DxOMark curve. There is a bump at ISO400, but since they don't measure at intermediate ISO, we can't see that it is lower at ISO320. The next result is at 200, that has higher DR again than 400, but not a full stop better, just as your data.



Oct 29, 2017 at 11:17 AM
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