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after reading your post of charts, some will conclude that the T4i is incapable of making pictures.Speedydom wrote:
DxO tested the Toshiba sensor of the new Nikon D5200, see the verdict under !
Will Canon make a new firmware to close the gap ?!
I'm the happy owner of a 650D and pictures are greats but I'm looking forward to seing a "real world" comparaison of the two rivals.MAC wrote:
after reading your post of charts, some will conclude that the T4i is incapable of making pictures.Speedydom wrote:
DxO tested the Toshiba sensor of the new Nikon D5200, see the verdict under !
Will Canon make a new firmware to close the gap ?!
Canon cameras take a beating the way dxo measures.
but in real pictures, cameras like the 5d3 get wedding camera of the year even though its ratings are below nikons
knock yourself out with charts
as you get more experience you'll realize it is about:Speedydom wrote:
I'm the happy owner of a 650D and pictures are greats but I'm looking forward to seing a "real world" comparaison of the two rivals.MAC wrote:
after reading your post of charts, some will conclude that the T4i is incapable of making pictures.Speedydom wrote:
DxO tested the Toshiba sensor of the new Nikon D5200, see the verdict under !
Will Canon make a new firmware to close the gap ?!
Canon cameras take a beating the way dxo measures.
but in real pictures, cameras like the 5d3 get wedding camera of the year even though its ratings are below nikons
knock yourself out with charts
The best APS-c camera is and has been the 7d for its speed and feature set.DxO score is always bad for Canon (Nikon D5200 is the best APSc ever according to DxO) but pictures are not so differents (see result for the D3200).
They don't do firmware updates like this - they'll fix errors and occasionally add features, but your T4i jpg engine is actually tuned very well - read The Digital Picture Site Review - you have pro IQ and some terrific features -- you just need to deploy the other 4 elementsI'm just wondering if Canon could make an improvement with a new firmware (maybe with the Files Patent [ No. 2013-12850 ]To Reduce Noise And Aliasing).
no need to wait. I can see from dxo what they got. look at the chart below:Waiting for the full DP review of the D5200 to see the real difference.
what I'd say is you have pro IQ and the features are great in the T4i for the budget $ - for the $600 I paid for mine, there isn't a camera out there that I'd rather have. I like my T4i more than my 60d.Speedydom wrote:
I'm happy with my body (I'am not a pro) my priority is fast focusing and the 650D seem better
http://www.ephotozine.com/article/nikon-d5200-review-21020
http://www.ephotozine.com/article/canon-eos-650d-digital-slr-review-19994
let me clarify what I said about second tier lenses for photos. I think you have two terrific lenses for the dollars. The 18-135 STM is the top tier lens combo for video with the T4i and one will not see much difference with a top tier lens. And yeah - I'd choose the new tamy 70-300 over my 55-250 IS -- and I love my 55-250 IS even though I have the 70-200 F2.8L + 1.4II ext.The pictures i took last year of racing cars are good (fast focus with 18-135 stm)
I know the 18-135 or tamy 70-300 sp are not the best lenses but others are off budget.
Thanks for the replies, I have a lot to discover with the 650D (especally DOF, my previous camera was a pana fz38)
I shoot both Canon and Nikon. In crop sensor cameras I have owned Rebel 300D (the original DRebel), 450D (XSI for about two weeks; should have kept it), 500D (T1i), and 650D (T4i), 40D, and 7D. On the Nikon side I have owned the D90 and D5100. Currently the only crop sensor cameras I currently own are the 300D (I'll never get rid of that classic) and the 650D.
yes, but I think it is the digic 5, versus the aa10s wrote:
Indeed. DXO ratings have their use but people shouldn't stare blindly at them.
So I'd like to add that the anti-aliasing filter in the 650D delivers much sharper pictures than its predecessors. Which means less sharpening needed when processing the RAW files. Ergo: less noise amplification with sharpening because you need to do less sharpening in post. Combine that with Lightroom's selective sharpening/noise reduction and you get butter smooth bokeh and sharp foreground even at higher ISO's. There indeed so much more in a camera than just the sensor specs.
Regards,
10s
Bryan's review explains what Canon said - digic5 for the raws tuned to 1dx sharpness levels10s wrote:
I also read that the JPEG output has improved. But my workflow is RAW and I often am amazed by the sharpness in these files. Others also noticed the increased sharpness but I can't remember if that was about JPEG or RAW. Regarding the AA filter Canon seems to have done the same with the 6D. Downside is that moire can pop up which can be a concern for video shooters. I do not have much experience with JPEG since I moved quickly to RAW with my previous 300D. I have no clue if DIGIC5 also works to improve RAW files however from Canon I expect honest unprocessed RAW output. Maybe I should try JPEG for a while...
Regards,
10s
kewlguy wrote:
When I got the 650D months ago, I realized that it's sharper than my 60D and 600D (sold the 60D already). The 650D might seem noisier but it retain the sharpness and definition very well even at high ISOs. Like 10s said, the gap between D5200 and 650D is actually not as big as DxO indicates. Have you seen D5200 samples? It has really low noise, but looks soft to me. It's either the AA filter is too strong or the lens just doesn't deliver. It clearly lacks the bite 650D has.
OTOH, I'm interested to see if any of Canon's future 24MP DSLRs omit the LPOF. I can't wait to see how they compare to Nikon's AA-less D7100...