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Thread: Is such an 1Dv camera possible? (See if I'm making sense!)

  1. #1
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    Is such an 1Dv camera possible? (See if I'm making sense!)



    I have been dreaming about a FF 1D mark IV camera ever since it was
    in the rumors, but it turned out to be a "minor" update to the 1D III,
    similar to the 50D to 40D upgrade. Nevertheless, now I begin to think if
    a possible 1Dv camera will finally bring us the longtime awaited
    revolution. So let's discuss if such a camera can be designed.


    See, now Canon has two 1-series bodies in their Lineup. Some
    people say it's redundant to do so since Canon can very possibly
    combine these two cameras into one while maintain the utility of two.
    To build upon that, I wonder if the following is doable from an
    engineering point of view.


    To make a FF camera that has a very
    high resolution (say 32mp) just like the resolution that the possible
    1Ds IV will obtain. Make the camera capable of shooting at full
    resolution at a low frame rate (say 5fps) to maintain its utility
    equivalent to an 1Ds camera - this is not something new to do. Now,
    let's also use the same FF sensor without cropping, reduce the image
    output to a lower resolution (say 16mp, just like to shoot lower rez
    images on your camera by adjusting image size) and increase the frame
    rate to 10FPS to simulate the performance of a "FF" 1D IV - I wonder how
    hard this can be.


    The current processors have proven to be fast
    enough to handle the data at this resolution and speed above. The idea
    of the movie mode of a FF DSLR (5D II) is to use the same FF sensor
    (without cropping) to achieve 24FPS or more at a much lower resolution
    compared to its native resolution. So can we use what we currently know
    how to do to make a camera that is both a FF high rez camera at low
    speed and a FF high speed camera at low rez? If so, i guess the merging
    of the 1-series bodies will make sense.


    Ben





    PS: Daniel, help!... =)

  2. #2

    Re: Is such an 1Dv camera possible? (See if I'm making sense!)



    Life's too short to spend time trying to make scene of what Canon should, could or would do... go spend some quality time with the family, and save the brain aneurism for the Canon execs that try to make these decisions - if they can make a buck off it, you better believe they'll do it.

  3. #3
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    Re: Is such an 1Dv camera possible? (See if I'm making sense!)



    Quote Originally Posted by Benjamin


    To make a FF camera that has a very
    high resolution (say 32mp) just like the resolution that the possible
    1Ds IV will obtain. Make the camera capable of shooting at full
    resolution at a low frame rate (say 5fps) to maintain its utility
    equivalent to an 1Ds camera - this is not something new to do. Now,
    let's also use the same FF sensor without cropping, reduce the image
    output to a lower resolution (say 16mp, just like to shoot lower rez
    images on your camera by adjusting image size) and increase the frame
    rate to 10FPS to simulate the performance of a "FF" 1D IV - I wonder how
    hard this can be.


    AFAIK, every camera on the market handles lower resolution by downsampling the sensor data, but is still reading the whole sensor every time. I think to accomplish what you're suggesting would involve reading every other pixel (i.e. the odds from this row, the evens from that row), and I don't know if that'd be feasible (or feasibly able to double the speed). So...I don't think your idea offers the flexibility you suggest.
    We're a Canon/Profoto family: five cameras, sixteen lenses, fifteen Profoto lights, too many modifiers.

  4. #4
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    Re: Is such an 1Dv camera possible? (See if I'm making sense!)



    Quote Originally Posted by Benjamin
    I have been dreaming about a FF 1D mark IV camera ever since it was
    in the rumors, but it turned out to be a "minor" update to the 1D III,
    similar to the 50D to 40D upgrade.

    This is off topic, but personally, I consider both the 1D4 and 50D to be major upgrades. The 30D and 1D2n are examples of what I consider to be minor upgrades. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, of course.


    Quote Originally Posted by Benjamin
    Nevertheless, now I begin to think if
    a possible 1Dv camera will finally bring us the longtime awaited
    revolution.

    I don't think it will be the 1D5, but I do think the camera you're dreaming of will come eventually.


    Quote Originally Posted by Benjamin
    I wonder if the following is doable from an
    engineering point of view.

    There are at least three difficulties:
    1. Swing the mirror fast enough
    2. Read the sensor with sufficient speed
    3. Downsample and/or process the data quickly enough



    As for the mirror, Nikon has proven that they can do 11 FPS on a full frame mirror in a $4,000 body (D3). Unfortunately, the rest of the camera isn't fast enough to match that, so you have to switch to 1.5X mode to get 11 FPS (or go down to 9 FPS and use the full frame).


    The next problem is reading the sensor fast enough. On the 5D2, the mirror assembly is cheap, so it can't hit more than 4 FPS. The
    sensor is probably faster than that; maybe 6 or 8 FPS; but nowhere near
    fast enough for 30 FPS. Even if it could read out the entire sensor at
    30 FPS, the electronics (DIGIC) wouldn't be fast enough to handle it.


    If your sensor can't hit 11 FPS, there are several workarounds:
    • Skipping
    • Cropping

    • Binning



    Skipping is the method Canon uses to create 30 FPS video on the 5D2. Instead of reading out the whole senosr, it skips 2 out of 3 rows. This results in terrible aliasing artifacts.


    Cropping is the method Nikon uses to get the 9 FPS up to 11 FPS on the D3s: it crops the angle of view to 1.5X. That allows the sensor to go much faster. This is also the method used to create 5X and 10X live view.


    On-chip binning is the best compromise. It connects multiple pixels together (e.g. four) and reads them out together. It also causes aliasing artifacts, but not as bad as the ones you get from skipping.


    After you do something to get the sensor fast enough, then you have to process all that data. The 1D series cameras use multiple DIGIC processors to process the raw data, create jpegs for camera previews, etc. Moore's Law helps here. Downsampling a high MP image to a low MP image is actually very difficult. Doing it in a way that doesn't cause artifacts is even more difficult, as Canon's highly flawed sRAW implementation shows.


    Quote Originally Posted by Benjamin
    So can we use what we currently know
    how to do to make a camera that is both a FF high rez camera at low
    speed and a FF high speed camera at low rez?

    Here's what I think a good "1D and 1Ds" combination camera would be:
    • 64 MP Full Frame 3 FPS (same pixel size as the Canon 7D)
    • 38 MP 1.3X mode 6 FPS
    • 16 MP Full Frame sRAW 11 FPS (on-chip binning)
    • 9.5 MP 1.3X mode 11 FPS (crop then fast 1/4 demosaic)



    I don't think that's what the 1D IV will be. I'm guessing more along the lines of 48 MP, 5 FPS, and video.

  5. #5
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    Re: Is such an 1Dv camera possible? (See if I'm making sense!)



    Ahh, I thought it was easy... Maybe just because I don't know enough to know it's hard.


    But anyway, fantastic explanation! Really appreciated![Y]





    Ben





    PS: I would call 30D and 1D II N "minor, minor upgrades"... hahah =)

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