[정보/강좌]A7R II vs 5DsR

페이지 정보

본문


http://www.cameralabs.com/reviews/Sony_Alpha_A7r_II/outdoor_resolution.shtml

http://www.cameralabs.com/reviews/Sony_Alpha_A7r_II/noise.shtml

Sony Alpha A7r Mark II vs Canon EOS 5DSr RAW quality


To compare the real-life quality between the Sony Alpha A7r Mark II and Canon EOS 5DSr, I shot this scene with both cameras moments apart using the same lens, the Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 set to f8. Both cameras were also set to their base sensitivity of 100 ISO and metered the same exposure. I focused them using magnified Live View to avoid front or rear focusing issues, and used mirror-lockup on the 5DSr to avoid vibrations.

 

Many thanks to B&H Photo for the loan of the EOS 5DSr and Sigma lens. You can support me anytime you shop at B&H (for anything!) by first clicking through to them from my link here.

I used a third-party lens for these resolution tests to place the bodies on a level playing field and isolate their sensor and processing from optics and potential corrections. I chose the Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 as it's one of the sharpest lenses I've tested (see my Sigma 50mm f1.4 ART review) and one which performs well on both bodies; I fitted it on the Sony using a Metabones Smart Adapter IV. There are of course benefits to using native lenses on each body, but the absence of a Sony FE 50mm or a Canon EF 55mm drew me to a third party solution. I'm also satisfied the Sigma lens here is delivering sufficient resolution for each body which is what I'm testing on this page.

Since image quality is what these cameras are all about, I'm skipping JPEG comparisons altogether on this page and jumping straight-in with a RAW comparison. I processed the RAW files from both cameras in Adobe Camera RAW using identical settings: Sharpening at 70 / 0.5 / 36 / 10, Luminance and Colour Noise Reduction both set to zero, and the Process to 2012 with the Adobe Standard profile, and the same daylight white balance. Lens Profile Corrections were disabled.

These settings were chosen to reveal the differences in sensor quality and isolate them from in-camera processing. The high degree of sharpening with a small radius and zero noise reduction is an extreme approach, but I chose them here to bright out all the detail and more easily reveal differences between the bodies.

 

SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_outmain_745.jpg

 

In the full view above you can see the areas I've selected for reproduction below at 100%, indicated by the red rectangles. Judging from this particular example, there's not a lot to choose between the A7r II and EOS 5DSr. Both are delivering highly detailed and crisp images thanks to their huge resolutions. I'm also pleased to report an absence of moire in any of the images from either camera I've examined, suggesting the absence of an OLPF (or in the case of the 5DSr, the cancellation of the filter) isn't having the negative effect some feared.

 

Looking closely, the slightly higher resolution of the 5DSr means the crops show a slightly smaller area, but I can't see any additional detail in this particular example, nor indeed in any others I've made with other subjects. When both files are processed identically using ACR, the EOS 5DSr is a little more contrasty and the A7r II a little sharper, but both can be adjusted as desired.

The fact is the EOS 5DSr and Alpha A7r Mark II are capable of resolving very similar degrees of real-life detail and I wouldn't choose one over the other in this regard. A handful of photographers who make huge tonal adjustments in RAW may prefer Canon for its uncompressed RAW files, and I certainly wish Sony would offer an uncompressed RAW option just to satisfy a complete market, but personally speaking I've never had any issues with retrieving reasonable highlight or shadow details from Sony files. Your mileage may vary, but again in this comparison, I'm satisfied the A7r Mark II and EOS 5DSr share essentially the same real-life resolving power.

But what about noise at higher sensitivities? Find out in my Sony A7r II noise results page, or if you've seen enough, check out my Sony A7r II sample images!

 
 

 

     
Sony Alpha A7r Mark II RAW (ACR 70 / 0.5 / 36 / 10)
Using Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 at f8
 
Canon EOS 5DSr RAW (ACR 70 / 0.5 / 36 / 10)
Using Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 at f8
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_out_RAW_crop1_945
 
 
f8, 100 ISO
 
 
  f8, 100 ISO
 
 
 
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_out_RAW_crop2_945
 
 
f8, 100 ISO
 
 
  f8, 100 ISO
 
 
 
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_out_RAW_crop3_945
 
 
f8, 100 ISO
 
 
  f8, 100 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_out_RAW_crop4_945
f8, 100 ISO
 
 
  f8, 100 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_out_RAW_crop5_945
f8, 100 ISO
 
 
  f8, 100 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_out_RAW_crop6_945
f8, 100 ISO
 
 
  f8, 100 ISO
 
 
 

Sony Alpha A7r Mark II vs Canon EOS 5DSr RAW noise

 
Canon5DSr_vs_SonyA7rII_noisemain_367.jpg
 
To compare noise levels under real-life conditions, I shot this scene with the Sony Alpha A7r Mark II and Canon EOS 5DSr at each of their ISO values. I fitted both cameras with the same Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 lens set to f8 and focused in Live View. DRO and Auto Lighting Optimiser were disabled and I used a sturdy tripod and mirror-lockup on the 5DSr to minimise vibrations. The full view is pictured opposite with the red rectangle indicating the area I cropped; note the Sony crops show a slightly larger area due to its slightly lower resolution.

Many thanks to B&H Photo for the loan of the EOS 5DSr and Sigma lens. You can support me anytime you shop at B&H (for anything!) by first clicking through to them from my link here.

Since image quality is what these cameras is all about, I'm skipping JPEG comparisons altogether on this page and jumping straight-in with a RAW comparison. I processed the RAW files from both cameras in Adobe Camera RAW using identical settings: Sharpening at 70 / 0.5 / 36 / 10, Luminance and Colour Noise Reduction both set to zero, and the Process to 2012 with the Adobe Standard profile, and the same interior white balance. Lens Profile Corrections were disabled here.

These settings were chosen to reveal the differences in sensor quality and isolate them from in-camera processing. The high degree of sharpening with a small radius enhances the finest details without causing undesirable artefacts, while the zero noise reduction unveils what's really going on behind the scenes - as such the visible noise levels at higher ISOs will be much greater than you're used to seeing in many comparisons, but again it's an approach that's designed to show the actual detail that's being recorded before you start work on processing and cleaning it up if desired.

Both cameras metered the same exposures, so what you're looking at below is directly comparable in every respect.

In the crops below the first thing you'll see is the slightly larger area captured by the Sony due to its slightly lower resolution. As seen on my previous outdoor resolution test, you'll also notice the Canon EOS 5DSr crops look a little more contrasty when files from both bodies are processed in ACR using the same settings.

Beyond this though, you'll have to really pixel-peep to see any differences. With noise reduction disabled and sharpness turned-up high in this test, there's inevitably a sprinkling of noise textures visible at low ISOs. It's clear from 400 ISO onwards, although with NR enabled and sharpness turned-down somewhat, as you would for normal processing, it doesn't present a problem for either body at this point.

But as explained above, I chose these aggressive settings to see what's going on behind the scenes, and if you look carefully the Canon EOS 5DSr is exhibiting slightly higher chroma noise than the Sony, along with what looks like a coarser grain. This becomes apparent around 3200 ISO and above and while both bodies are still recording similar degrees of real-life detail, you'd need to apply higher NR to the Canon files to achieve a similarly clean result.

Since higher NR comes at the cost of lost detail, this gives the Sony A7r II a small edge over the Canon, although it may not be as significant as many hoped and the extended range up to 102400 ISO inevitably becomes very noisy when viewed up-close.

While some pixel-peepers may see sufficient difference to justify a buying decision, I'd say both the EOS 5DSr and A7r Mark II are delivering very similar results in terms of real-life resolution and noise in my tests. The decision between them should therefore be much more about their design, handling and features along with their overall system.

I'm working on my final review as we speak, but in the meantime check out my Sony A7r Mark II sample images!

 
 
 


 

     
Sony Alpha A7r Mark II RAW (ACR 70 / 0.5 / 36 / 10 / NR disabled)
Using Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 at f8
 
Canon EOS 5DSr RAW (ACR 70 / 0.5 / 36 / 10 / NR disabled)
Using Sigma ART 50mm f1.4 at f8
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_50iso.j
 
 
50 ISO
 
 
  50 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_100iso.
100 ISO
 
 
  100 ISO
 
 
 
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_200iso.
 
 
200 ISO
 
 
  200 ISO
 
 
 
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_400iso.
 
 
400 ISO
 
 
  400 ISO
 
 
 
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_800iso.
 
 
800 ISO
 
 
  800 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_1600iso
 
 
1600 ISO
 
 
  1600 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_3200iso
 
 
3200 ISO
 
 
  3200 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_6400iso
 
 
6400 ISO
 
 
  6400 ISO
     
SonyA7rII_vs_Canon5DSr_noise_RAW_12800is
 
 
12800 ISO
 
 
  12800 ISO
     
Sony_A7r_II_noise_RAW_25600iso.jpg
 
 
25600 ISO
 
 
  25600 ISO not available
     
Sony_A7r_II_noise_RAW_51200iso.jpg
51200 ISO
 
 
  51200 ISO not available
     
Sony_A7r_II_noise_RAW_102400iso.jpg
102400 ISO
 
 
  102400 ISO not available
     

 

...

글쓴이 명함

nepo 메일보내기 홈페이지 아이디로 검색 회원등급 : 최고관리자 포인트 : 301,049
레벨 31
경험치 96,619

Progress Bar 59%

가입일 : 2015-06-14 02:58:45
서명 : 장비는 도구다.
자기소개 : Photographer & Photo Gear Reviewer
0   0

댓글목록

등록된 댓글이 없습니다.

Total 211건 1 페이지
글쓰기포인트: 10     댓글쓰기포인트: 5           
보여지는 사진 가로 : 1117px / 업로드 수 : 5개 / 용량 : 파일당 10MB
제목 포토 글쓴이 날짜
자유게시판  A7R2용 액정 보호 강화유리 댓글1 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.04.05.01.11 00
정보/강좌  소니 컷수 확인 프로그램 nepo 아이디로 검색 18.12.09.22.26 00
정보/강좌  A7 셔터 카운트 프로그램 nepo 아이디로 검색 18.08.09.16.57 00
자유게시판  요즘 좋다고 난리인 소니 A7M3 체험단 하는군요. nepo 아이디로 검색 18.03.27.23.41 00
정보/강좌  소니 FF 미러리스에서 아쉬운 점은 nepo 아이디로 검색 18.03.25.22.13 00
정보/강좌  자이스 록시아 25mm f2.4 리뷰 nepo 아이디로 검색 18.03.12.16.09 00
정보/강좌  포토존 렌즈 리뷰:소니 FE 24-105mm f4G nepo 아이디로 검색 18.02.11.13.45 00
정보/강좌  A7R III 리뷰 nepo 아이디로 검색 18.01.31.22.07 00
정보/강좌  Voigtlander Apo-Lanthar 65 mm f 2 Aspherical 1: 2 마크로 리뷰 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.12.01.21.41 00
정보/강좌  소니 렌즈 QC 문제 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.11.25.20.49 00
정보/강좌  A7R3의 픽셀 시프트 기능 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.10.31.20.29 00
정보/강좌  상면위상차 센서의 단점-플래시 고속 동조시 밴딩 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.10.30.11.52 00
정보/강좌  Voigtlander Nokton 40mm f1.2 샘플 이미지 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.10.06.16.58 00
정보/강좌  Laowa 15mm f2가 나오네요 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.08.17.02.25 00
정보/강좌  A7R2 화질 비교:압축 vs 비압축/전자 셔터 vs 기계 셔터댓글1 nepo 아이디로 검색 17.07.25.23.18 00

월간베스트

Login

Ranking

  • 01 안알랴줌
    241,207
  • 02 † ЌûỲắـĶĬΣ
    214,573
  • 03 봉자아범
    200,485
  • 04 한댜
    139,334
  • 05 고슴도치
    132,659
  • 06 날좋은날예쁘게
    108,482
  • 07 viva
    103,258
  • 08 물빛
    102,791
  • 09 돌팔매
    76,544
  • 10 fomosan
    45,265
  • 01 † ЌûỲắـĶĬΣ
    56,396
  • 02 안알랴줌
    38,589
  • 03 한댜
    38,235
  • 04 고슴도치
    35,039
  • 05 물빛
    28,982
  • 06 돌팔매
    27,560
  • 07 봉자아범
    20,346
  • 08 fomosan
    18,529
  • 09 강달프
    17,013
  • 10 오키드
    15,321