Phil Young
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I'm going to try this when I get a chance.
Not even. Its saying the only thing that happens is detail loss. Noise as proven in this post can be handled quite easily.
Rapscallion said:Not sure i understand your post Phil?
Regarding noise, yes it can be removed, but any detail that the noise has masked (esp in low signal / dark areas) cannot be recovered. But i guess you knew that anyway!
The linked thread is interesting and quite relevant to this thread. It is in effect saying the sensor in a d7000 is doing the same thing at iso 950 as at 25600!
scottthehat said:I know its not the d7000,
But heres a shot at iso 6400 exposed to the right and also an iso 800.
both f2.8,sp 1/15th sec,56mm
6400
pulled back from 800
.
How many of you think that exercise aids in fat reduction? And what if I say its such a small percentage its hardly worth the effort?....
joescrivens said:tell me more about this. I'm trying to lose weight by doing exercise ... are you saying this will not happen?
To put it simply, yes.
Check out my facebook page "Phil young personal trainer and nutritionist" you can see some notes there regarding the above.
On topic: These tests then, are proving we may as well just not bother with higher ISO- just shoot at 800 and process the bejaysis out of them - or it only works under very controlled conditions. I'd like to see someone shoot a gig at 800 under crappy lighting, when you need faster shutter speeds. And pull them back.
On topic: These tests then, are proving we may as well just not bother with higher ISO- just shoot at 800 and process the bejaysis out of them - or it only works under very controlled conditions. I'd like to see someone shoot a gig at 800 under crappy lighting, when you need faster shutter speeds. And pull them back.
It makes complete sense. The reason your image will be dark is because of the fast shutter speeds. For gigs all you need is about 1/160th [unless it's a fast metal band, like Maiden, go to 1/200th or better] . We push ISO at gigs so our shots are not dark. If you can pull them back to life either way ....
joescrivens said:No you are wrong.
You'll have to dial in some crazy negative compensation to get your camera to meter it properly.
try it, leave your camera at 0 compensation and then put it in Av mode and point it at a dark scene, your shutter will drop - up your iso to 25600 and you'll get a lovely fast shutter. Thats exactly why the photographer above for pearl jam uses 6400 instead of 800 - the noise may well be the same but the shutter will not unless you dial in crazy negative exposure compensation.
What on earth would be the point? You'd end up with black images you couldn't check until you processed all of them - so it's extra PP work for no gain.
You would have to shoot everything in manual mode to apply this technique.
I'm definately going to try it and I urge everyone else to and post results.
joescrivens said:hmm I read the article but I am confused. I have been exercising for 6 weeks and have remained on the same diet, in that time I have lost weight - about 5 lbs.
I like my diet (im not saying it's the best, but I don't want to change it, it makes me happy). Are you telling me that keeping the same diet and exercising is not going to lose me 2 stone in 6 months?
joescrivens said:can you tell me what the point of doing it would be?
disadvantages
1. You'd get images you couldn't review on your screen
2. You have to process every image before you can see it (which means you can't do a quick thumbnail cull)
3. More processing
4. The noise is basically the same anyway
Advantages
?
but the shutter speed is set for iso 6400 but you use iso 800 instead and come up with the same result so why not just use the iso 6400 and save p&p time.If proved useful then its good in situations where a fast shutter is required and. optimal detail is retained. Weddings, gigs, christenings etc.
If proved useful then its good in situations where a fast shutter is required and. optimal detail is retained. Weddings, gigs, christenings etc.
but the shutter speed is set for iso 6400 but you use iso 800 instead and come up with the same result so why not just use the iso 6400 and save p&p time.
finally somebody is on the same page

finally somebody is on the same page
scottthehat said:but the shutter speed is set for iso 6400 but you use iso 800 instead and come up with the same result so why not just use the iso 6400 and save p&p time.
Detail will be greater at 800....and if we're looking for optimal IQ?
Detail will be greater at 800....and if we're looking for optimal IQ?
joescrivens said:where have you got this from, where is the proof in this sentence? From what I am seeing there is negligable difference - certainly not enough difference to compensate for the disadvantages that I posted above
I've never said it is proof yet. I will test Joe just have patience lol.
Detail will be greater at 800
6400 is better, there is zero better detail in the pulled back 800.
Case closed, lets all have cake
joescrivens said:6400 is better, there is zero better detail in the pulled back 800.
Case closed, lets all have cake