is there a way to have iso 50 on the 20d? i read an article in a magazine earlier and the camera used was the 20d iso 50......I already have the cfn to use 3200 is there a different one for the iso 50? thanks for anyone that can help me
dou_b_14 Senior Member 955 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2006 Location: RGV Texas More info | Nov 20, 2006 18:32 | #1 is there a way to have iso 50 on the 20d? i read an article in a magazine earlier and the camera used was the 20d iso 50......I already have the cfn to use 3200 is there a different one for the iso 50? thanks for anyone that can help me Canon 5d w/grip / canon 7d/ canon G1X/ 24-70mm 2.8 L/ 17-40mm L/ 50mm 1.4/(2)580ex/ pw's (3) /st-e2/ (2)cp-e3 battery pack/ abr800/ vagabond 2/ calumet genesis 200w(2)/
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Nov 20, 2006 18:44 | #2 I have hints of memories of a high end camera going on ISO 50, something like a 1D or even a nokin D model. But it is all a blurr, so it might as well have been a dream. --Mario
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Doom1701e Goldmember 1,241 posts Likes: 2 Joined May 2004 Location: ©@Ŀϊf¤ŗПιǻ More info | Nov 20, 2006 18:49 | #3 |
KevC Goldmember 3,154 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: to More info | Nov 20, 2006 18:50 | #4 I think they're "extended" anyway, having less dynamic range than ISO100 (sorta like H vs ISO1600). Too much gear...
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05Xrunner Goldmember, Flipflopper. More info | Nov 20, 2006 18:51 | #5 Doom1701e wrote in post #2291152 Not on the 20D. The 5D and 30D can. 30D cant it just does 1/3 ISO stops...but 100 low as it goes My gear
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Moppie Moderator 15,105 posts Gallery: 24 photos Best ofs: 1 Likes: 456 Joined Sep 2004 Location: Akarana, Aotearoa. (Kiwiland) More info | Nov 20, 2006 18:52 | #6 Doom1701e wrote in post #2291152 Not on the 20D. The 5D and 30D can. Not my 30D?
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Doom1701e Goldmember 1,241 posts Likes: 2 Joined May 2004 Location: ©@Ŀϊf¤ŗПιǻ More info | Nov 20, 2006 19:00 | #7 05Xrunner wrote in post #2291171 30D cant it just does 1/3 ISO stops...but 100 low as it goes Well that sucks, shows you how much the 30D gets used. www.firemaplephotography.com
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adas Goldmember 1,496 posts Likes: 5 Joined Aug 2004 More info | Nov 20, 2006 19:00 | #8 On the 20D, shoot ISO 100 EC+1, then recover in raw converter. 6D, 20D, G7X
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dontblink Senior Member 431 posts Joined Apr 2006 More info | Nov 20, 2006 19:07 | #9 There is no ISO 50 on the 20D. Canon 20D + grip
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Nov 21, 2006 11:23 | #10 I just figured out a way to do it, but it requires an exacto knife, and some cutting of the sensor, and some epoxy. --Mario
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deadpass Goldmember 3,353 posts Joined Jun 2006 Location: phoenix, az More info | Nov 21, 2006 11:29 | #11 adas wrote in post #2291221 On the 20D, shoot ISO 100 EC+1, then recover in raw converter.
a camera
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cdifoto Don't get pissy with me 34,091 posts Likes: 45 Joined Dec 2005 More info | Nov 21, 2006 11:31 | #12 adas wrote in post #2291221 On the 20D, shoot ISO 100 EC+1, then recover in raw converter. deadpass wrote in post #2294485 that's pretty much what happens on the cameras that can do ISO 50. Not really. If you do that you easily blow highlights. I've never seen evidence that ISO50 has a caveat of blowing the highlights. Did you lose Digital Photo Professional (DPP)? Get it here
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Nov 21, 2006 11:44 | #13 cdi-ink.com wrote in post #2294493 Not really. If you do that you easily blow highlights. I've never seen evidence that ISO50 has a caveat of blowing the highlights. Well it does have less dynamic range than the higher ISOs do. So it's either going to blow the highlights or lose shadow detail. Jon
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RonaldS.Jr. Prodigal "Brick" Layer More info | Nov 21, 2006 11:47 | #14 ISO 50 is achieved by an in-camera software trick. Not sure if 3200 is a trick as well. that's why they're called "H" and "L" instead of 50 and 3200. Mac users swear by their computers. PC users swear at theirs.
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cdifoto Don't get pissy with me 34,091 posts Likes: 45 Joined Dec 2005 More info | Nov 21, 2006 11:47 | #15 Jon wrote in post #2294535 Well it does have less dynamic range than the higher ISOs do. So it's either going to blow the highlights or lose shadow detail. I never read that. Makes sense I suppose. But...wouldn't ISO100 with a "proper exposure" be way off when turned down to 50? If so, seems kinda pointless to even have ISO50. I can understand ISO3200 because sometimes you're just desperate for shutter speeds...but why would you need ISO50? JUST for waterfalls? Did you lose Digital Photo Professional (DPP)? Get it here
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