stylus 1 V dslr test.

D

Donald B

Guest
Can anyone that owns the stylus 1 and a dslr do a comparison shot demonstrating if the iso is the same or different? could you set both cameras to shutter priority to 160 sec in an indoor low light situation and let both cameras select iso and aperture and post the results. thanks I want to see if it is the same as the xz1.

cheers don
 
Hi Don - here is the comparison:

Nikon D5100
Nikon D5100

6b74c90e995d4928bc2f032128407a43.jpg

Olympus Stylus 1
 
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Can anyone that owns the stylus 1 and a dslr do a comparison shot demonstrating if the iso is the same or different? could you set both cameras to shutter priority to 160 sec in an indoor low light situation and let both cameras select iso and aperture and post the results. thanks I want to see if it is the same as the xz1.
I don't have a DSLR anymore (do have an EP5 if that will suffice), but what are you looking to see that the Stylus 1 does that the XZ-1 didn't? Can you be more specific?
 
Theme of the post:




bigger sensor -> better DoF















thanks for your effort.



Ben
 
still wrong need to set the Nikon to 10/1600 = 160 sec, cheers lso let the camera set the iso its prt of the test. my xz1 shoots at iso 800 and my slr 3200 for the same exposure. if the stylus is the same it will be an awesome low light camera as well.

--
Pentax K7, Panasonic fz150, Olympus XZ1, my main toys.
 
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thanks for the iso 1600 shots that will conclude the experiment when I see what the difference in iso is, the stylus is pretty darn good at 1600 a little nr in topas and it would equal the 5200 for detail as well.

cheers don
 
At 1600 ISO that Stylus 1 has a little more noise - but it is certainly better than you could get from a compact in 2011 when the D5100 came out.

Henry
 
still wrong need to set the Nikon to 10/1600 = 160 sec, cheers lso let the camera set the iso its prt of the test. my xz1 shoots at iso 800 and my slr 3200 for the same exposure. if the stylus is the same it will be an awesome low light camera as well
not doubting what you say but how could both cameras have the same settings as far as aperture and shutter speed and need two stops difference in ISO? I realize that there are differences in the way that camera manufacturers measure ISO but it generally is not by that much.
 
just applied nr (dn5)to the S1 image WOW, the detail is excellent, which means the S1 could match the best 16meg sensor ever made at ISO4000 . fantastic camera for shooting dance concerts. no shutter noise and better dof. still would like to see the 160 sec shots PLeeeeeeeeeeese ?

cheers don
 
ISO standard is not the same for different sensor sizes. their is no standard.
I wonder how many people here believe that? I certainly don't.

I do believe, however, that there are some small variations from camera to camera. That I can see in DxOMark tests. But no standard => no way!

--
David
www.pbase.com/morepix
 
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ISO standard is not the same for different sensor sizes. their is no standard.
I wonder how many people here believe that? I certainly don't.

I do believe, however, that there are some small variations from camera to camera. That I can see in DxOMark tests. But no standard => no way!

--
David
www.pbase.com/morepix

look at the data on the photos. its a well known fact.











--
Pentax K7, Panasonic fz150, Olympus XZ1, my main toys.
 
Back to the drawing board for a second (tired)...
 
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