Zarch
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- Name
- Mick
- Edit My Images
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DxOMark.com said:Sports Score is based on Low-Light ISO performance (values in ISO index). Low-Light ISO indicates the highest ISO sensitivity to which your camera can be set while maintaining a high quality, low-noise image (based on a Signal-to-Noise-Ratio [SNR] of 30dB, a dynamic range of 9EVs and a color depth of 18bits). As cameras improve, the highest ISO setting to produce 30dB, 9EVs, 18-bit images will continuously increase, making this scale open. Low-Light ISO performance is of primary importance in photojournalism, sports and action photography.
I've seen a lot of talk recently about DxO marks trying to quantify ISO performance between various Nikons models. I'm interested in how my D3100 stacks up against other models with a view to a potential upgrade, in particular the D7000. But don't really know how to read these DXO ISO ratings and how to compare them with regard "real world" performance.
I took a look at my Lightroom catalogue over the weekend and it says that just 15% of my shots are ISO 1600 or 3200 and only another 15% between 800 and 1599 (crazy Auto ISO)
So with 70% of my shots at ISO 799 or less, would I really gain much from a D3100 > D7000 upgrade purely on ISO performance?
In real terms, what does D3100 (919) v D7000 (1167) really mean? I suppose I would see better images at 1600/3200 taken with the D7000, but by how much?
Here's the full table to Nikon cameras that I pulled from DXOmark and Snapsort.
3253: D3s
2980: D600
2979: D800E
2965: D4
2853: D800
2303: D700
2290: D3
1992: D3x
--------------- distinct jump in ratings
1284: D5200
1183: D5100
1131: D3200
1167: D7000
977: D90
919: D3100
868: D5000
707: D300s
679: D300
583: D200
563: D3000
562: D60
Is it naive to base image quality comparison's like this solely on these ISO figures? If so, what else do you need to take into account?
I think its an interesting subject and would like people's opinion on it.

