Panasonic G9 vs G9M2 Normalised PDR Chart

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This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights



b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one





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If you like my image I would appreciate if you follow me on social media
instagram http://instagram.com/interceptor121
My flickr sets http://www.flickr.com/photos/interceptor121/
Youtube channel http://www.youtube.com/interceptor121
Underwater Photo and Video Blog http://interceptor121.com
If you want to get in touch don't send me a PM rather contact me directly at my website/social media
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200
That is the frustrating part. All the limitations with this DR boost wizardry yields an imperceptible increase in PDR only at base ISO.
2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200
I suppose there is no way to turn NR off? It is baked in at 3200 and above.
2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not
Seems so.
3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures
Or use AF at burst rates greater than 10fps. Also PreBurst = DRBurst.
I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.
Those sensors were available. Panasonic kept ringing the DfD bell despite the poor performance.
Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
Hopefully the Gh7 has fixed DR boost to include all shutter speeds and burst rates. Please report back when it lands.
 
At least there is extra 5Mp more pixels and PDAF :-)

Thank you for your info. :-)
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
This is really impressive and shows an astounding improvement!

But I do have one question that would help me understand: what is PDR?
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
Below (#1) is dark frame of linear data from G9MII raised by +13 stops after the black level subtraction (gain amplification 8192). Even after this amplification the following DR-room remains before the saturation:

For red channel - 1.78 eV

For green channel - 2.43 eV

For blue channel - 1.67 eV

Thus the scientific dynamic range for the G9MII has the following values (sum of 13 eV and left DR which one can read at Data Statistics iWE-pannel in #1):



For red channel 13eV+1.78eV=14.78 eV

For green channel 13eV+2.43eV=15.43 eV

For blue channel 13eV+1.67 eV=14.67 eV



The same for G9, but only with +10 stops amplification (gain is 1024), is shown in #2

The values of the dynamic range for G9 are as follows:

For red channel 10eV+1.99eV=11.99 eV

For green channel 10eV+2.91eV=12.91 eV

For blue channel 10eV+2.0 eV=12 eV



Thus, the difference in dynamic range between G9II and G9 is of about 2.5 stops for all the RGB channels. The huge DR of the G9II justifies the new 16-bit per channel Raw format introduced by Panasonic.

The data you show can not be considered as reliable.

#1. Dark-frame linear data from G9MII compensated by +13 Stops (eVs)
#1. Dark-frame linear data from G9MII compensated by +13 Stops (eVs)



#2. Dark frame linear data from G9 compensated by +10 stops (eVs).
#2. Dark frame linear data from G9 compensated by +10 stops (eVs).
 
This is really impressive and shows an astounding improvement!

But I do have one question that would help me understand: what is PDR?
My thought exactly. Google gave me the following:

Physicians Desk Reference

Preliminary Design Review

But the winner is: Paintless Dent Repair!!
 
Serguei, could you share the raw files for the G9 and G9ii dark frame shots used in your analysis? Much appreciated.
 
Last edited:
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one

--
If you like my image I would appreciate if you follow me on social media
instagram http://instagram.com/interceptor121
My flickr sets http://www.flickr.com/photos/interceptor121/
Youtube channel http://www.youtube.com/interceptor121
Underwater Photo and Video Blog http://interceptor121.com
If you want to get in touch don't send me a PM rather contact me directly at my website/social media
Not really that concerned about technical charts, more with real world photographs. I have taken around 300,000 photos with the G9 and have just started using the G9 II. Yes, the AF is a massive step forward but the sensor is a big improvement, too. There is more detail for cropping, which I welcome as a wildlife photographer but more impressive is the ability to raise shadows with little or no noise penalty. Correcting under exposure with the G9 was always something which impacted image quality, even using Deep Prime noise reduction. I don’t have to think twice about pushing for shadow detail with the G9 II. My experience thus accords with the tests conducted by Richard Wong, which showed the G9 II to be better at recovering shadow detail than two of the leading APS-C cameras and well ahead of the OM sensor. I doubt that anyone using the G9 II would find themselves wishing for the 20 mp sensor!

--
Cheers
David
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
Not really that concerned about technical charts, more with real world photographs. I have taken around 300,000 photos with the G9 and have just started using the G9 II. Yes, the AF is a massive step forward but the sensor is a big improvement, too. There is more detail for cropping, which I welcome as a wildlife photographer but more impressive is the ability to raise shadows with little or no noise penalty. Correcting under exposure with the G9 was always something which impacted image quality, even using Deep Prime noise reduction. I don’t have to think twice about pushing for shadow detail with the G9 II. My experience thus accords with the tests conducted by Richard Wong, which showed the G9 II to be better at recovering shadow detail than two of the leading APS-C cameras and well ahead of the OM sensor. I doubt that anyone using the G9 II would find themselves wishing for the 20 mp sensor!
Massimo (Interceptor) loves his ‘Photons to Photos’ chart, which are interesting, but limited to the real world. Back in December, I posted lots of G9ii vs G9 raw images, which clearly showed the G9ii recovered deep shadows at least 2 stops better than the G9 (if I remember correctly, someone (Lothar?) showed 1+ stop better than Om-1).
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
Not really that concerned about technical charts, more with real world photographs. I have taken around 300,000 photos with the G9 and have just started using the G9 II. Yes, the AF is a massive step forward but the sensor is a big improvement, too. There is more detail for cropping, which I welcome as a wildlife photographer but more impressive is the ability to raise shadows with little or no noise penalty. Correcting under exposure with the G9 was always something which impacted image quality, even using Deep Prime noise reduction. I don’t have to think twice about pushing for shadow detail with the G9 II. My experience thus accords with the tests conducted by Richard Wong, which showed the G9 II to be better at recovering shadow detail than two of the leading APS-C cameras and well ahead of the OM sensor. I doubt that anyone using the G9 II would find themselves wishing for the 20 mp sensor!
Massimo (Interceptor) loves his ‘Photons to Photos’ chart, which are interesting, but limited to the real world. Back in December, I posted lots of G9ii vs G9 raw images, which clearly showed the G9ii recovered deep shadows at least 2 stops better than the G9 (if I remember correctly, someone (Lothar?) showed 1+ stop better than Om-1).
That chimes with my experience but I guess there’s another agenda at play 😎

--
Cheers
David
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
Not really that concerned about technical charts, more with real world photographs. I have taken around 300,000 photos with the G9 and have just started using the G9 II. Yes, the AF is a massive step forward but the sensor is a big improvement, too. There is more detail for cropping, which I welcome as a wildlife photographer but more impressive is the ability to raise shadows with little or no noise penalty. Correcting under exposure with the G9 was always something which impacted image quality, even using Deep Prime noise reduction. I don’t have to think twice about pushing for shadow detail with the G9 II. My experience thus accords with the tests conducted by Richard Wong, which showed the G9 II to be better at recovering shadow detail than two of the leading APS-C cameras and well ahead of the OM sensor. I doubt that anyone using the G9 II would find themselves wishing for the 20 mp sensor!
Massimo (Interceptor) loves his ‘Photons to Photos’ chart, which are interesting, but limited to the real world. Back in December, I posted lots of G9ii vs G9 raw images, which clearly showed the G9ii recovered deep shadows at least 2 stops better than the G9 (if I remember correctly, someone (Lothar?) showed 1+ stop better than Om-1).
That chimes with my experience but I guess there’s another agenda at play 😎
Seems to be….but not a surprise….quite consistent…beats me, can’t figure it out 😀
 
Last edited:
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
Not really that concerned about technical charts, more with real world photographs. I have taken around 300,000 photos with the G9 and have just started using the G9 II. Yes, the AF is a massive step forward but the sensor is a big improvement, too. There is more detail for cropping, which I welcome as a wildlife photographer but more impressive is the ability to raise shadows with little or no noise penalty. Correcting under exposure with the G9 was always something which impacted image quality, even using Deep Prime noise reduction. I don’t have to think twice about pushing for shadow detail with the G9 II. My experience thus accords with the tests conducted by Richard Wong, which showed the G9 II to be better at recovering shadow detail than two of the leading APS-C cameras and well ahead of the OM sensor. I doubt that anyone using the G9 II would find themselves wishing for the 20 mp sensor!

--
Cheers
David
Thats to do with baseline exposure being zero. The original was -0.66 under and this shows



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If you like my image I would appreciate if you follow me on social media
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Youtube channel http://www.youtube.com/interceptor121
Underwater Photo and Video Blog http://interceptor121.com
If you want to get in touch don't send me a PM rather contact me directly at my website/social media
 
This is really impressive and shows an astounding improvement!

But I do have one question that would help me understand: what is PDR?
My thought exactly. Google gave me the following:

Physicians Desk Reference

Preliminary Design Review

But the winner is: Paintless Dent Repair!!
 
And it is a measure of sensor performance used by Bill Claff at his photons to photos web site when characterizing sensors. See the definition here:

https://www.photonstophotos.net/Gen...ngineering_and_Photographic_Dynamic_Range.htm

It's often cited in sensor comparisons.
When we run out of theory simply because of the science involved needs explaining then it is the actual results that sell cameras and keep us interested.

Somewhere along the line the blank looks and polite "uh-huh" noises give way to orders being placed and the quiet enjoyment of making images to the best of our capability is restored.

Why do we always clamour for sample images even though is is always the camera's fault if we don't like them? .... and if the images are ordained "perfect" then the skills of the actual photographer who made them are disregarded.
 
And it is a measure of sensor performance used by Bill Claff at his photons to photos web site when characterizing sensors. See the definition here:

https://www.photonstophotos.net/Gen...ngineering_and_Photographic_Dynamic_Range.htm

It's often cited in sensor comparisons.
When we run out of theory simply because of the science involved needs explaining then it is the actual results that sell cameras and keep us interested.

Somewhere along the line the blank looks and polite "uh-huh" noises give way to orders being placed and the quiet enjoyment of making images to the best of our capability is restored.

Why do we always clamour for sample images even though is is always the camera's fault if we don't like them? .... and if the images are ordained "perfect" then the skills of the actual photographer who made them are disregarded.
 
And it is a measure of sensor performance used by Bill Claff at his photons to photos web site when characterizing sensors. See the definition here:

https://www.photonstophotos.net/Gen...ngineering_and_Photographic_Dynamic_Range.htm

It's often cited in sensor comparisons.
When we run out of theory simply because of the science involved needs explaining then it is the actual results that sell cameras and keep us interested.

Somewhere along the line the blank looks and polite "uh-huh" noises give way to orders being placed and the quiet enjoyment of making images to the best of our capability is restored.

Why do we always clamour for sample images
So we can run analytics on the EXIF data.
even though is is always the camera's fault if we don't like them?

.... and if the images are ordained "perfect" then the skills of the actual photographer who made them are disregarded.
 
This chart shows the PDR from photonstophotos with a normalised ISO.

You can see if you convert the RAW files to DNG that the G9 has a baseline exposure of 0.66 while the G9M2 has zero. This means that ISO 200 on the G9 is internally ISO 125 on the G9M2, Note you cannot see this shooting JPEGs the camera will meter identically but adjust the exposure internally when there is a value to protect the highlights

b7b25da1ea204c76ad61eff366679ce6.jpg.png

What you can see from this chart where I have eliminated the extended ISO values:

1. The overall improvement of PDR is small more or less 0.3 Ev until the G9M2 noise reduction kicks in at ISO 3200

2. The absolute DR of the G9M2 is 0.24 Ev higher

Some considerations

1. Panasonic dual gain output does not really bring a massive change in PDR, noise reduction instead is effective at ISO higher than 3200

2. If you don't need the autofocus and want to use the camera for landscapes and long exposures you are probably better off with the original G9 so you don't have to worry about the boost being on or not

3. The G9M2 offers some unique features compared to the G9 that may be important to you as long as they don't interfere with the DGO architecture see long exposures

I keep thinking why did Panasonic not introduce PDAF earlier on Sony sensor but we can't change the past I guess.

Autofocus is probably the major improvement and quite an important one especially for certain type of shooters and for those doing talking heads video that will not see the DFD flutter. I hope the GH7 does similary as I will be getting one
This is really impressive and shows an astounding improvement!

But I do have one question that would help me understand: what is PDR?
PDR stands for photographic dynamic range a proxy for image quality

In practical terms it means the stops on a graduated chart that you can have SNR=20


Other sites use different method this one is a good proxy for DxOMark DR which is referred as Engineering Dynamic Range

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If you like my image I would appreciate if you follow me on social media
instagram http://instagram.com/interceptor121
My flickr sets http://www.flickr.com/photos/interceptor121/
Youtube channel http://www.youtube.com/interceptor121
Underwater Photo and Video Blog http://interceptor121.com
If you want to get in touch don't send me a PM rather contact me directly at my website/social media
 
Below (#1) is dark frame of linear data from G9MII raised by +13 stops after the black level subtraction (gain amplification 8192). Even after this amplification the following DR-room remains before the saturation:

For red channel - 1.78 eV

For green channel - 2.43 eV

For blue channel - 1.67 eV

Thus the scientific dynamic range for the G9MII has the following values (sum of 13 eV and left DR which one can read at Data Statistics iWE-pannel in #1):

For red channel 13eV+1.78eV=14.78 eV

For green channel 13eV+2.43eV=15.43 eV

For blue channel 13eV+1.67 eV=14.67 eV

The same for G9, but only with +10 stops amplification (gain is 1024), is shown in #2

The values of the dynamic range for G9 are as follows:

For red channel 10eV+1.99eV=11.99 eV

For green channel 10eV+2.91eV=12.91 eV

For blue channel 10eV+2.0 eV=12 eV

Thus, the difference in dynamic range between G9II and G9 is of about 2.5 stops for all the RGB channels. The huge DR of the G9II justifies the new 16-bit per channel Raw format introduced by Panasonic.

The data you show can not be considered as reliable.

#1. Dark-frame linear data from G9MII compensated by +13 Stops (eVs)
#1. Dark-frame linear data from G9MII compensated by +13 Stops (eVs)

#2. Dark frame linear data from G9 compensated by +10 stops (eVs).
#2. Dark frame linear data from G9 compensated by +10 stops (eVs).
Thanks for the link and sorry for the delayed response. My request was prompted by the pretty significant difference in the appearance of the dark frames in your respective screenshots for the G9ii and G9 confirmed by my examination of the raws you kindly provided (especially considering that the G9ii rendering is pushed +3 EV relative to the G9 rendering). I wondered whether there might be some uncontrolled variables in play. My initial suspects:
  • ISO (100 for the G9ii and 200 for the G9, but that only accounts for a possible 1 EV difference at most);
  • Shutter mode (ES for the G9ii and mechanical for the G9);
  • Shutter speed (1/32000 for the G9ii and 1/500 for the G9, but both are fast enough to rule out meaningful impact from heat buildup);
  • Lens related auto-distortion correction (the G9ii had no lens mounted and presumably was shot with the body cap on while the G9 was shot with the Oly 12-100mm mounted and presumably with a lens cap on, but there are no visible signs of correlated noise patterns in the G9 screenshot indicative of distortion-correction).
  • Possible difference in external light leak most likely due to viewfinders not being consistently covered.
Not having the two cameras in question here to run my own tests and not really having had much personal experience with dark frames, I decided to experiment with my Oly EM1iii with changes to ISO, shutter mode, shutter speed and lens mounted/removed. Aside from the expected visible difference between ISO speeds, the impact of the other variables was minor and certainly not enough to account for such a large visible difference, with the exception of one variable: light leak. I was rather surprised by how large a difference it made when I failed to cover the viewfinder and shot a dark frame in my relatively darkened studio with only shaded natural light present. In retrospect, I should have realized that even a tiny amount of external light pollution would be quite meaningful when the dark frame is pushed in processing by 10 EV or more. What's more, the impact on the individual channel behavior is surprisingly variable. I'd be interested in your thoughts on the cause but I wonder whether it might have something to do with the relative position of the viewfinder to the light source sometimes causing a filtering effect on the light that leaks in via the viewfinder. Just a wild guess...

Back to the main question, can you confirm that the possibility of light leakage was truly excluded for both of the dark frames used in your comparison?

Below is a composite of crops from my EM1iii dark frame experiment. All were processed in ACR at default settings except the exposure slider was +5ev for all and sharpening and all noise reduction was zero'd out. In Photoshop an additional +5ev exposure adjustment layer was applied as well.

Top Left = ISO 200, 1/8000, no lens attached, viewfinder NOT shielded; Top Middle = ISO 200, 1/8000 no lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Top Right = ISO 200, 1/8000 lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Bottom Left = ISO 100, 1/500, no lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Bottom Middle = ISO 200, 1/32000 (ES), no lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Bottom RIght = ISO 200, 1/500, no lens attached, viewfinder NOT shielded.
Top Left = ISO 200, 1/8000, no lens attached, viewfinder NOT shielded; Top Middle = ISO 200, 1/8000 no lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Top Right = ISO 200, 1/8000 lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Bottom Left = ISO 100, 1/500, no lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Bottom Middle = ISO 200, 1/32000 (ES), no lens attached, viewfinder shielded; Bottom RIght = ISO 200, 1/500, no lens attached, viewfinder NOT shielded.
 
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