ejmartin
Veteran Member
One issue left hanging in the analysis was the issue of the overall normalization of the ISO of the LX3 RAW data. I was able to secure some side-by-side shots comparing the LX3 to two Canon DSLR's. Here there will be differences due to both the ISO normalization of the DSLR compared to, as well as the transmissivity of the lens put on the DSLR. For the 1D3 tested with 24-70/f2.8, the LX3 was 0.51 stop less sensitive, for the 1Ds3 tested with 24-105/f4, the LX3 was 0.86 stop less sensitive. So relative to the DSLR at ISO 100 (assuming the DSLR normalized properly; otherwise, consider these ratios of sensitivities), the LX3 would be at somewhere around ISO 55 to 70 in the RAW data. However the cameras (LX3 and DSLR) appear to be metering the same, so this means that the LX3 is underexposing the RAW by about .5-.86 stop and lifting it back up in post-processing.
I am puzzled as to why they would make such a choice of underexposure, leaving vastly more highlight headroom than the DSLR's do and consequently bringing more shadow noise into a typical exposure than is necessary.
BTW the results seem to agree qualitatively with the ISO calibration done by DxO at their new site DxOMark.com.
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emil
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http://theory.uchicago.edu/~ejm/pix/20d/
I am puzzled as to why they would make such a choice of underexposure, leaving vastly more highlight headroom than the DSLR's do and consequently bringing more shadow noise into a typical exposure than is necessary.
BTW the results seem to agree qualitatively with the ISO calibration done by DxO at their new site DxOMark.com.
--
emil
--
http://theory.uchicago.edu/~ejm/pix/20d/