I went back to the D4 and D810 data sets and ran the ISOlessness test on them without any data set scrubbing. Here are the results with a target mean of 0.01 for ISO 6400 for the D4 and ISO 4000 for the D810 (the tested ISOs are two-thirds of a stop apart because the… [Read More]
Archives for December 2014
Sony a7II ISOless testing
I have developed a test for “ISOlessness” as part of the photon transfer analysis program. The test is described here. Here’s a summary: You specify the highest ISO that you wish to consider, and what the mean signal level should be at that ISO as a ratio to full scale. For example, if you’re interested… [Read More]
Comparing two a7II models
Yesterday, I reported on modeling the a7II at each ISO. Earlier, I modeled the camera over the same ISO range. The difference is that the first method yields a series of read noise numbers, one for each raw channel at each ISO, while the second method produces two read noise numbers for each channel, which… [Read More]
Modeling the a7II one ISO at a time
In the post before last, I modeled the Sony a7II over a range of in-camera ISO settings, and reported on the results. Today, I’ll show you what happens when you model the camera one ISO at a time. This is a much simpler task, aside from the fact that you have to do it over… [Read More]
Comparing the a7II photon-transfer model to other cameras
Yesterday, I presented the result of fitting the a7II data to the standard photon-transfer model. Today I’ll compare those results to two other cameras, the Nikon D4 and D810. Here are the numbers: In the table above, we separate the read noise into two components, as described earlier. The first is the read noise on the… [Read More]