John Sheehy wrote in post #19401901
Not necessarily. You can convert at full res and keep that as a working TIF or JPEG; just get used to the fact that you're looking at Nicole Kidman's skin under a microscope, and it's
supposed to look uglier there, and the converter is likely sharpening and making NR vs sharpening trade-offs at a level of detail that would not even exist with larger pixels.
I don't think anyone here has suggested that it is "wrong" to look at 100% pixel views. The point has always been that it is not equitable to view at 100% to compare images or subjects with different pixel counts. If you want to compare the R7 to the R6 at 100% with a 2x on the R6 only, then that makes sense for focal-length-limited subjects, but that would mean 4x the ISO on the R6, and you would likely find that the R7 has slightly less noise and better color resolution, with the same pixels-on-subject with the same main lens, subject, lighting, and distance.
It's sort of my point. Not that it's wrong to assess at 100%, more that it's just too hard (for me)
Viewing at 100% works for me for lower pixel densities but the extreme case of APS-C 32.5mp results in looking at mush at 100%.
I have mentioned that monitor size and resolution is a significant variable.
I have a fairly large display but also fairly low resolution. (27 inch, 2560x1440)
4K resolution on 27 inch is common and even 4K on laptops now.
When I view my 3000 pixel JPGs at 'fit to screen', I'm at about 31% and If I change to "view at full size" I'm at 43%.
Depending on subject size in the frame and subject type, if I'm assessing 20mp 1DX2 pics, I'll view at 100% or sometimes '1 click out'. I have never checked what 1 click out is, but ball park 80%.
So 20mp, 24mp, 30mp I treat pretty much the same. For 90D 83mp FF equivalent and 61mp A7RIV files I usually find 100% difficult to work with.
The exception is Sony 135 1.8 results. Incredibly sharp, so even at 61mp, 100% viewing can work.