![]() At both high- and low-contrast, shooting at ISOs ranging from ISO100 to ISO800, texture is reproduced well.With the larger sensor of the 6D Mark II, more artifacts are recorded.The Canon 6D Mark II captures at least as high a proportion of line pairs per picture height in high and low-contrast scenes as its predecessor, except low contrast at high ISO speeds (ISO12800 and above).A visual inspection of an image captured by the 6D Mark II at ISO12800 of the complex detailed black-and-white pattern of the Siemens star, shows only a slight softening compared to an image shot at ISO100.Resolution in images shot by the Canon 6D Mark II at higher ISOs (above ISO3200) is less good, albeit strongly improved in comparison to the Canon 6D.The 6D Mark II uses more than 90% of its sensor at ISOs from ISO100 to ISO1600.At ISO100, the Canon 6D Mark II captures 1966 line pairs per picture height, using 95% of what theoretically could be used of its 26 Megapixel sensor.Marked improvement in resolution compared to the Canon 6D: the 6D Mark II’s 26 Megapixel sensor is larger than the 6D’s 20 Megapixel sensor, and the newer model uses a greater proportion of its sensor at nearly all ISOs tested.Full res files of every visual in this review are available to download for your pixel-peeping pleasure here. We’ll feature a hands-on review of the 6D Mark II in the December issue of PDN. See here for a full methodological rundown of how Image Engineering puts cameras through their paces. PDN is a member of the Technical Image Press Association which has contracted with Image Engineering to perform detailed lab tests of digital cameras. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |