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Archive 2005 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range

  
 
Pondria
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p.2 #1 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


geonahta wrote:
Great thread and thanks to everyone.
Two points:
1) Noise in the underexposed shots might be affected by shutter speed. Anyone interested in doing a comparison under different lighting situations?
2) Anyone interested in doing the test 3 times while replacing the gray card with red/green/blue cards?


Would you please elaborate more on the 1) ?



Oct 03, 2005 at 08:31 AM
Pondria
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p.2 #2 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


tayo wrote:
Ok, but without more information on how the histogram windows work, it might be that you are just extracting the information from the default profiles supplied with each RAW converter for that camera type (which are of course similar), and not testing the individual camera itself very much.

Can you elaborate more ? I don't understand the question. Thanks !



Oct 03, 2005 at 10:59 PM
Bobster2
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p.2 #3 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


I really like the idea of using the Kodak gray step wedge as the basis for the test. But not in a single exposure. I did a preliminary test shooting the gray steps at variable shutter speeds. Then I open a file in ACR, do a white balance, and then look only at the middle gray step and the step next to it while I am making the exposure adjustment. Can I distinguish the middle step from those around it? That's the test to see if there is really detail in the highlights or details in the shadows.

My first test on the 5D seems to show 9 stops of dynamic range and that's conserative because the low shadow noise combined with some noise reduction will allow me to go lower.

The biggest advantage of the gray steps is that you can see if there are any weird artifacts appearing in the different gray levels when you need to make large exposure adjustments. There may be color shifts that you find unacceptable. So you may have to take that into account when you talk about dynamic range, it's not the maxiumum range that you want, it the maximum usable range.



Oct 05, 2005 at 08:39 AM
Joe Lacy
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p.2 #4 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


I wish we had more 5d numbers.


Oct 05, 2005 at 11:47 AM
Joe Lacy
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p.2 #5 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1032&message=15322568

I would be interested in 20d DR at iso 400 to see if you do indeed get a spike.



Oct 06, 2005 at 02:14 PM
BeeMan458
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p.2 #6 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


Pondria.

Thet's some excellent, real world information in your summation sheet as it shows the 5D/1DsMkII to be the DR leaders, Leica aside and one or two more iterations and we should all be able to afford a 9/10 stop ranged sensor body

This is a good thing.



Oct 09, 2005 at 11:43 AM
BeeMan458
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p.2 #7 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


Not sure how the forground came out. Let's see.

I can bring the clouds out in the same manner. Lasso an area, adjust sliders in levels and then history brush the line of demarcation.




Oct 11, 2005 at 09:35 AM
Pondria
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p.2 #8 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


The latest data so far. Come on folks, you need a project for weekend



Oct 14, 2005 at 10:28 PM
Don Clary
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p.2 #9 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


Pondria, here's a tidbit of eye science that relates to this discussion. I'm a physicist, who among other jobs, designs RGB (red green blue) LED backlights for LCDs (liquid crystal displays). LED (light emitting diode) intensity is measured in units called milli-candelas. These are eye-weighted units; one millicandela each of red, green, or blue, all appear to be equal intensity.

Here's the interesting part: in order to make white light you must mix, the red, green and blue colors. But it takes about 61% green, 31% red, and only 8% blue to make white light. This was determined by actual lab measurements.

This partially explains why white histograms don't show accurate exposure for each color. A white histogram basically measures green, since it is 61%. Blue only accounts for 8%, and most subjects don't contain much blue anyway. So the red channel is the most likely one to be blown out, since it contributes only 31%.



Oct 24, 2005 at 11:22 AM
Pondria
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p.2 #10 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


Rico,
The flare model is very intriguing.
I think the method that I proposed is relatively free from flare. It is mostly determined by the noise floor. Interestingly, no data so far has broken the 10 stop barrier. I think we have a couple of stops to go before hitting the limit suggested by the flare model.



Oct 26, 2005 at 08:36 PM
jonwienke
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p.2 #11 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


slin100 wrote:
I've seen evidence somewhere, that the native color response of our sensors is more well-suited to a magenta-tinted light source. I've read of one photographer who has experimented heavily with his 10D and 20D and claims that he can achieve higher dynamic range with such a light source than with normal daylight.

The reasoning is that a tinted light source allows the three channels to independently achieve their maximum dynamic range.


I'm don't buy that at all, unless you're talking about just a slight tint, like what you'd get from a +/-10-point tint adjustment in ACR, to get the color balance perfectly dialed in to the sensor response. The fact that there are fewer red and blue pixels in a Bayer sensor has zero relevance to the color temp at which the pixels with each filter color will all output equal RAW values. In other words, the quantity of pixels has no connection to their individual output values (and the ratio between them) given a specific color of light. A given pixel's output value will not be affected by the color filter over any other pixel.



Oct 29, 2005 at 12:13 PM
Pondria
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p.2 #12 · Re: Measure the Dynamic Range


makaweli wrote:
What about the dynamic range of compacts or EVFs ? Is there a big difference opposite to DSLR ?


Due to the smaller size of the photo cells, they are expected to have less DR.



Oct 31, 2005 at 09:19 AM
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