Nikon D300 12bit raw vs 14bit raw

Monkey

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Craig Denton
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Has anyone else noticed that if you run in 14bit raw, you get about 2-3 fps as opposed to the 6fps in 12 bit?

Not that im bothered, the jpegs that come out of the D300 are absolutly cock on
 
Yup that's why I use 12 bit raw most of the time but never jpeg
 
Yup that's why I use 12 bit raw most of the time but never jpeg

you should try the JPEG on the D300, There is nothing in it.

I will only bother with raw now if i feel i could never take the shot again.
 
Has anyone tested the difference between 'size priority' and 'optimal priority' for jpegs?
 
you should try the JPEG on the D300, There is nothing in it.

I disagree. My first time out shooting motorsport I discovered I hadn't taken enough CF cards so I shot in jpeg fine. Never again. You don't realise how good the NEF/RAW format is until you're forced to shoot in jpeg.
 
Hi Monkey,

Just asked the very same question on another forum:

Going through the settings on my D300 and thought I would select 14bit which took the available pictures on 4gb CF card from 156 down to 139. This is set in RAW and JPEG fine.

I also noticed a marked slowing down of how long it takes for the shutter to open/close and record the picture.

The opinion that came back is as follows:

Yeah, there's some extra shutter lag and a lower max frame-rate. The upside slightly cleaner shadows. I think if you aren't shooting high FPS it's worth using 14-bit especially if you're going to use ADL or recover shadows in post-processing.

I try to shoot landscapes and most stable scenes at 14-bit and action and snapshots at 12-bit to avoid the issues you mention. I could care less about the difference in consumed memory. The answer is to carry an extra or a bigger CF card. I like you use 4gb cards and I prefer the Lexar UDMA cards although others are probably just as good.


I then read this information on histograms:

http://www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/understanding-series/understanding-histograms.shtml

Which made me realise that with the ability to capture in 14 bit and only using 12 bit when speed of capture is not important is a bit daft!

I also agree that the quality of the RAW image is so good that I would not take a photo in jpeg only.

I record jpeg as well as RAW because I use a Playstation 3 on a network that allows me to look at my photos on my projector and overlay music. A great way of really enjoying your photos! The PS3 does not recognise the RAW files of course.

Regards

Chris
 
you should try the JPEG on the D300, There is nothing in it.

I will only bother with raw now if i feel i could never take the shot again.

But a jpg is only 8 bit - by not shooting in RAW you're throwing away tons of the available data!

8bit = 16,581,375 levels (colours if you like)

12bit = 68,669,157,375 levels

14bit = 4,397,241,253,887 levels

Now, whether there is anything capable of displaying (print or projector) that displays to that degree of subtle tone is a moot point. But, in truth, 8 bit is only in 'kindergarten' compared to 14 bit which is doing an 'honours degree'!

(I think I've got the sums right)
 
i stand corrected, just shot a batch at 14 bit and im converted.

Capture NX2 made a great job of processing them
 
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