Luminous Landscape Forum

Equipment & Techniques => Digital Cameras & Shooting Techniques => Topic started by: 61Dynamic on November 17, 2004, 10:36:04 am

Title: Why not FF with multiple chips?
Post by: 61Dynamic on November 17, 2004, 10:36:04 am
According to Micheal's article about Dalsa (http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/dalsa.shtml) that's pretty much what they do for larger chips.
Title: Why not FF with multiple chips?
Post by: philthygeezer on November 17, 2004, 10:13:14 am
Seems to me that CMOS chip expenses are on a curve with chip size.

Why not wire two or four chips together to get full frame, and then process the image to the memory card?  Could be a lot cheaper...
Title: Why not FF with multiple chips?
Post by: BJL on November 17, 2004, 11:20:48 am
Chip joining has been tried, but with poor results, and I do not think that this is exactly what Dalsa is doing; I think that they are joining several "stepper images" on a single chip.

An early ill-fated Minolta DSLR really had two chips side by side, but a special prism arrangement was needed to split the image, since there was inevitably a gap between the chips, too big to fudge over with firmware tricks.


Still, all the talk of joining and firmware adjustments at the edges and such make me prefer to stay with sensors small enough to be cut from a single piece of cloth, so to speak. It is bad enough that Trinitron style monitors have one or two thin but annoying lines across them!