Hi,
Just a few comments. Marc McCalmont has written that his Pentax K5 has better DR than his P45+. Now he has an IQ180 (Camera). http://www.luminous-landscape.com/forum/index.php?topic=55756.msg453739#msg453739
The definition that DxO uses for DR is FWC/read noise, or SNR=1. I'm not sure how relevant this figure is. High DR means that read noise is low.
The Fuji S5 has two set of sensels and does essentially something like on chip HDR. So it gains some advantage.
The Nikon D700 is not an APS-C camera, it's full frame, and it is built for high ISO performance. It's readout is noisy, therefore it gets less than very good DR rating at DxO.
According to DxO mark the DR of the D7000 is higher than that of D700 at low ISO. If you look at "tonal range", which is based on different SNR criteria you see that the D700 is better at all ISOs. The tonal range is about shot noise, and here the larger size of the sensor comes into play.
I never stated anything else than that shrinking pixel size, within reasonable limits will not increase noise. It will reduce DR, however. But DR (at SNR=1) does probably not matter that much to photography.
DxO measurements are not based on converted data, AFAIK, so they are not using their raw-converter. You can read raw data without conversion.
Look here, folks with higher exams than you or me (I happen to have an MSc in mechanical engineerting, too) have spent a lot of effort getting insight in how sensors work. Why don't you read up on the stuff?
I would start with this one: http://theory.uchicago.edu/~ejm/pix/20d/tests/noise/index.html
Also, I would remind you that you started this discussion claiming that the new sensors would have extreme OLP (AA-filtering) for video, that this is not the case has been clearly shown by Michael Reichmann's image samples and also by the test in the Australian paper I referred to earlier. HD-Video is about two megapixels so that would require extreme AA-filtering. Sony has actually a NEX size sensor built for a videocamera with 15 micron pixels, but that has nothing to do with the NEX-7.
Best regards
Erik
I'm sorry to say that I just realized that there is a completely different approach here that leads nowhere! Its obviously my fault not realizing the different approach. In my view (which is a fundamental to my approach), a photo is only the printed thing in paper, this view is the same with Adams, Kappa, Kertez, Bresson, Koudelka, Man Ray, or any other PHOTOGRAPHER that I know! Since I consider myself as a photographer, I print my own photos in a lab THAT I OWN AND RUN which is considered by other photographers that choose it from other labs, to be a top quality one by any standard worldwide! But since I am also a photographer and have the responsibility to teach photography to newcomers, I also have the responsibility to test most of the new tech that is induced in these "Archaic" days we live with digital equipment. My procedure when testing is based on the above fundamentals and Is the one I found most effective for photography with printed images, than newer theories that prove things on screens (not even monitors sometimes) among "photographers" that never print but have an opinion on everything! The procedure is: 1. Shoot Raw, 2. Convert Raw to 16bit Tiff with as much DR latitude as possible and with the OPTIMUM Raw conversion engine FOR THE RAW COMPRESSION LOGIC that the camera's sensor was designed for. 3. Process the tiff for max. contrast that will withstand full "highlight DR" when printing. 4. Adjust "levels" and "Gamma" in PS for optimum LowlightDR/noise character (personal matter, opinions are as many as A-Ho..es). 5. Print with absolute profile. 6. Compare prints only.
To do this I shoot with 17 different cameras (not all that I own.., only the ones I use) and 162 different lenses (both analog and digital of all formats and media) and use a full color analog lab with color analyzer, Thermostatic devise, top enlarger ...etc, scanner at 4000dpi of 4.9 D-max which is used at least on 8x scanning, 10bit monitor, dual processor multicore 32 Gb ram 4x Graf.card computer (only describe our main machine), profile calibrator for all our devises, and fully linearized 112cm 11 pigment ink plotter (also use tonner and chemical lasers) that prints at 2880dpi! (As I say in my site we can have more than 98% profile accuracy for the first -test- print, even if we print gold or silver.)
Based on the above tests, the results are as I quoted earlier, both in DR and noise! I obviously think that there are all shorts of crap spread around the web and I am really sorry that people "bite" on those, it seems that crooks pretending to be photographers without pictures is a good business in the "corrupted" times we live on. Cheers, Theodoros.
www.fotometria.grP.S. I'd rather not continue the above conversation unless you quote your own test or experience and not refer "dogmatically" all the time, to things that you've read and that have created false impressions and theories on you. In fact let theory creators to defend their theories by themselves(!), Don't let them use you.
Ah.. and another thing... "I never stated anything else than that shrinking pixel size, within reasonable limits will not increase noise" that you state up there IS A CHANGE IN YOUR ORIGINAL POSITION because "within reasonable limits" is absent in what you was stating before, also... 24mpx on an APS-c sensor is "beyond reasonable limits" by definition because its todays... "upper limit"!!!!