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You are here: Home / GFX 100 II / Fujifilm GFX 100 II — ISOlessness at low ISO settings

Fujifilm GFX 100 II — ISOlessness at low ISO settings

October 6, 2023 JimK Leave a Comment

This is the seventeenth post in a series of tests of the Fujifilm GFX 100, Mark II. You can find all the posts in this series by going to the Categories pane in the right hand panel and clicking on “GFX 100 II”.

From my earlier quantitative posts with the GFX 100 II, we know that it’s not ISOless in the range from ISO 80 through 400, though it is darmed close over the range 100 through 400. There is a distinct read noise improvement at the transition from ISO 400 to ISO 500. I want to examine this behavior visually.  In this post, I’ll be looking at deep shadow noise with 16-bit precision at ISOs 80, 400, and 500.

For this test, I mounted a 110 mm f/2 Fuji GF lens on the GFX 100 II, put the camera on a RRS tripod and C1 head, used manual focus, and set an exposure that by the camera’s metering system, was 6 stops down from normal.

The rest of the particulars:

  • ISO 80, 400, 500
  • IBIS off
  • 16 bit precision
  • f/5.6 at 1/25 second
  • EFCS
  • Single shot drive mode
  • Same exposure for each

Developed in Lightroom, with default settings except:

  • 5-stop Exposure move for ISO 80, 3 stops for ISO 400, 2.67 stops for ISO 500.
  • Shadows +100
  • Blacks +37
  • Noise reduction turned off
  • Sharpening amount 20 (default is 40)
  • White balanced to the white text in Hunt’s book on color

Here is the whole frame at all three ISOs.

ISO 80

 

ISO 400

 

ISO 500

 

Some crops at about 200%:

ISO 80

 

ISO 400

 

ISO 500

 

ISO 80

 

ISO 400

 

ISO 500

 

 

ISO 80

 

ISO 400

 

ISO 500

It’s clear that the ISO 500 images are the winners from the noise perspective. ISO 80 is no worse than ISO 400. I think you can treat the camera as ISOless over the range ISO 80-400 for almost all purposes.

 

GFX 100 II, The Last Word

← Fujifilm GFX 100 II — deep shadow noise at 14 and 16 bit precision Fujifilm GFX 100 II — ISOlessness at high ISO settings →

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