with RGBG green channel has 2x more pixels than any other channel and about 1.4 better resolution.
So it's a good place to start for reconstructing luminance "channel".
With RGBW all channels will have same 1/4 pixel count and same lower resolution.
And you can't just add up G+W like you can with G1+G2
Well, driving the sensor up to 5 digits ISO sounds cool, but is only one part of the story.
Having it in a DSLR makes me wonder, how to AF and how to find a suitable frame in darkness? Hard to imagine to have such an ISO monster for just taking handheld pictures in dark northern winter-woods. Tons of fanboys will scream for precise, fast AF-C, even if that means the AF would still work but I can't recognize a dark thing in the dark finder.
Alright, admittedly high ISO are good for a lot of things. Stopping down f/5.6-8 lenses or use them with converters, i.e.
Quote:Well, driving the sensor up to 5 digits ISO sounds cool, but is only one part of the story.
Having it in a DSLR makes me wonder, how to AF and how to find a suitable frame in darkness? Hard to imagine to have such an ISO monster for just taking handheld pictures in dark northern winter-woods. Tons of fanboys will scream for precise, fast AF-C, even if that means the AF would still work but I can't recognize a dark think in the dark finder.
Alright, admittedly high ISO are good for a lot of things. Stopping down f/5.6-8 lenses or use them with converters, i.e.
Time to go EVF
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Kind regards, WIm
Gear: Canon EOS R with 3 primes and 2 zooms, 4 EF-R adapters, Canon EOS 5 (analog), 9 Canon EF primes, a lone Canon EF zoom, 2 extenders, 2 converters, tubes; Olympus OM-D 1 Mk II & Pen F with 12 primes, 6 zooms, and 3 Metabones EF-MFT adapters ....
EVF improved a lot since Sony F505, true. But not enough yet to handle low light situations reliably. At least the Fuji X-T2 has more troubles to focus quickly and precisely in dark conditions than a D750 or D810. And those are no top performers like D500 / D5.