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Nikon DSLR Cameras
General Digital SLR Cameras
Sensor Pixel Density
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<blockquote data-quote="Whiskeyman" data-source="post: 605689" data-attributes="member: 13556"><p>Jake, My experience has been that it is far better to increase the ISO and properly expose the image, as opposed to leaving the ISO lower and using post processing to improve an underexposed image. While there are limits to what ISO may be satisfactorily usable for each camera/camera model, I rarely run out of ISO range where I don't have a backup plan for better exposure.</p><p></p><p>What I'd like to see would be a comparison of a particular sensor, coupled with the software delivered with different cameras, i.e., say the D500 with EXPEED 3 and 4 processing. As well as the earlier cameras with the EXPEED 5 processing... I don't ever see that happening, though.</p><p></p><p>WM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Whiskeyman, post: 605689, member: 13556"] Jake, My experience has been that it is far better to increase the ISO and properly expose the image, as opposed to leaving the ISO lower and using post processing to improve an underexposed image. While there are limits to what ISO may be satisfactorily usable for each camera/camera model, I rarely run out of ISO range where I don't have a backup plan for better exposure. What I'd like to see would be a comparison of a particular sensor, coupled with the software delivered with different cameras, i.e., say the D500 with EXPEED 3 and 4 processing. As well as the earlier cameras with the EXPEED 5 processing... I don't ever see that happening, though. WM [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
General Digital SLR Cameras
Sensor Pixel Density
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