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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
OLPF Removal in the D750
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 579537" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>Really? You've seen the sh*t storms for things that no one can reproduce, like the shadow box in the D750. Imagine if Nikon released a camera where <em>every body</em> could produce moired images? The internet would go nuts. </p><p></p><p>Nikon published a detailed treatise about the OLPF when they released the D800e to explain why they weren't crazy for doing it and they were fairly specific about pixel densities and where the line was where the OLPF was no longer required in all but extreme cases. 24MP's on a full sized sensor is on the wrong side of that line and would be the death nail for a body released without it, and in Nikon's case it could permanently damage the company. </p><p></p><p>Moire is not a huge problem for most photographers, but for many pros it's something they encounter all the time. Canon hasn't removed it and, if my brother is right about it, probably never will. They have software that is unbelievably good at sharpening images SOOC (name escapes me), so why would they risk the hit?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 579537, member: 9240"] Really? You've seen the sh*t storms for things that no one can reproduce, like the shadow box in the D750. Imagine if Nikon released a camera where [I]every body[/I] could produce moired images? The internet would go nuts. Nikon published a detailed treatise about the OLPF when they released the D800e to explain why they weren't crazy for doing it and they were fairly specific about pixel densities and where the line was where the OLPF was no longer required in all but extreme cases. 24MP's on a full sized sensor is on the wrong side of that line and would be the death nail for a body released without it, and in Nikon's case it could permanently damage the company. Moire is not a huge problem for most photographers, but for many pros it's something they encounter all the time. Canon hasn't removed it and, if my brother is right about it, probably never will. They have software that is unbelievably good at sharpening images SOOC (name escapes me), so why would they risk the hit? [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
OLPF Removal in the D750
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