PacAce wrote in post #3989439
If you are shooting in JPEG or using DPP to convert your raw to JPEG, then HTP will help with the white subjects, especially under bright sunlight. However, if you are shooting raw and converting using ACR or some other 3rd party converter that knows nothing about HTP, it really doesn't matter if you shoot at, say, ISO 200 with HTP on or ISO 100 with HTP off and underexpose by a stop. In either case, you'll need to readjust your exposure during raw conversion anyway.
PacAce can you please explain why, or where you have seen any info that makes you think this.
I checked 2 images taken in raw, and opened them in DPP and CS3, (ACR), one image with HTP on and one off in camera, and don't see anything that tells me anything different.
One thing for sure though, DPP reads and interrupts the raw data different from CS3, DPP seems to compress the range of the raw data in the histogram, from the shadow to the highlights, and it does it to the raw data from an image taken with and with out HTP, where as CS3 histogram seems to have a wider dynamic range, with HTP on and off, though with it on it seems to cap the highlights more.
Need other opinions on this, and I only checked a couple of images, I would be better off I think finding images where Highlights were more blown