SkaGoat
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2009
- Messages
- 922
I was replying in another thread, and instead of hijacking that thread, I decided to start a new one.
I must admit to start, I shoot Canon.
I've been reading a lot of press on the 7D Mark II, and few weeks ago I see the headlines of "7D Mark II image quality no better than Nikon D300s according to DXOMark".
DXOMark gives the Canon EOS 7D Mark II a overall score of 70.
The Nikon D300S is also a score of 70, and the Nikon D7100 has a overall score of 83. This is where most Nikon (and Sony) fan boys stop.
But from all the reading I had done up until this point touted how good the high ISO noise, and Dynamic Range were on the new 7D Mark II. I was confused, so I dug into the graphs.
First you have to take into account what the 7D Mark II was designed to do. It is designed to be a Sports/Wildlife camera. It's industry leading AF, mixed with a fast burst rate, and the 1.6x crop ratio make it ideal for shooting sports and animals. It was never designed to shoot landscapes, or portraits, and will most likely people who buy this camera will very rarely use it for these things.
The First graph is comparing the Signal to Noise ratio between the 7D Mark II, D300S, and D7100.
This graph clearly shows that not only does it have a higher max ISO than either camera, noise wise it is clearly better than the D300S, and it matches the D7100.
The next graph is the Dynamic Range between the 7D Mark II, D300S, and D7100.
It simly destroys the D300S for DR at all ISO except for base ISO, the 7D Mark II, being used for what it's designed to do will very rarely be used to shoot at base ISO. Base ISO is important for landscapes, getting a shot of that bald eagle during golden hour, with a 600mm f/5.6 lens is not going to be shot at base ISO. There is under 1 EV difference between the 7D Mark II, and the D7100 by the time you get the 1600 ISO. And again, the D300S is not even close to the 7D Mark II anywhere but base ISO.
Lets also remember the 7D Mark II is much more expensive, has a much faster burst rate, and a much better AF system than both the Nikon cameras.
DXOMark clearly rates base ISO DR highly in the algorithm it uses to come up with the overall score, my argument would be most users are not shooting base ISO.
DXOMark goes so far in their review to recommend users purchase the Sony A77 Mark II instead, there are pluses and minuses, Canon has a better lens line up, the Sony is faster, and cheaper, but it's AF isn't as good. It's also a little noisier. Here are a couple graphs
My point is basically the Canon receives a much lower score then it's contemporaries simply because they don't concentrate on base ISO noise performance. The 7D Mark II beats the A77 Mark II in IQ, but still receives a lower score.
I must admit to start, I shoot Canon.
I've been reading a lot of press on the 7D Mark II, and few weeks ago I see the headlines of "7D Mark II image quality no better than Nikon D300s according to DXOMark".
DXOMark gives the Canon EOS 7D Mark II a overall score of 70.
The Nikon D300S is also a score of 70, and the Nikon D7100 has a overall score of 83. This is where most Nikon (and Sony) fan boys stop.
But from all the reading I had done up until this point touted how good the high ISO noise, and Dynamic Range were on the new 7D Mark II. I was confused, so I dug into the graphs.
First you have to take into account what the 7D Mark II was designed to do. It is designed to be a Sports/Wildlife camera. It's industry leading AF, mixed with a fast burst rate, and the 1.6x crop ratio make it ideal for shooting sports and animals. It was never designed to shoot landscapes, or portraits, and will most likely people who buy this camera will very rarely use it for these things.
The First graph is comparing the Signal to Noise ratio between the 7D Mark II, D300S, and D7100.

This graph clearly shows that not only does it have a higher max ISO than either camera, noise wise it is clearly better than the D300S, and it matches the D7100.
The next graph is the Dynamic Range between the 7D Mark II, D300S, and D7100.

It simly destroys the D300S for DR at all ISO except for base ISO, the 7D Mark II, being used for what it's designed to do will very rarely be used to shoot at base ISO. Base ISO is important for landscapes, getting a shot of that bald eagle during golden hour, with a 600mm f/5.6 lens is not going to be shot at base ISO. There is under 1 EV difference between the 7D Mark II, and the D7100 by the time you get the 1600 ISO. And again, the D300S is not even close to the 7D Mark II anywhere but base ISO.
Lets also remember the 7D Mark II is much more expensive, has a much faster burst rate, and a much better AF system than both the Nikon cameras.
DXOMark clearly rates base ISO DR highly in the algorithm it uses to come up with the overall score, my argument would be most users are not shooting base ISO.
DXOMark goes so far in their review to recommend users purchase the Sony A77 Mark II instead, there are pluses and minuses, Canon has a better lens line up, the Sony is faster, and cheaper, but it's AF isn't as good. It's also a little noisier. Here are a couple graphs


My point is basically the Canon receives a much lower score then it's contemporaries simply because they don't concentrate on base ISO noise performance. The 7D Mark II beats the A77 Mark II in IQ, but still receives a lower score.