I'm not sure if I understand everything in this message. But here goes, I have Canon 20D that has been modified by Hutech. The IR cut-off filter has been removed, and because the anti-aliasing was attached to that filter the camera has no AA filter. The filter that was removed was replaced by a specially coated clear filter to preserve auto-focusing. My camera requires an IR filter in front of the lens, which makes difficult to shoot because you cannot see through the filter. In the fall Hutech will begin producing bodies that have an IR filter in front of the sensor, so there will be no filter on the lens and the camera will be dedicated to IR. Are not the manufacturers or after market modifiers coming close to a dedicated B/W camera?. Gary ----- Original Message ----- From: <claudej1@...> To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Tuesday, July 12, 2005 6:35 AM Subject: [Digital BW] Digital Zone System via filters OK, the whole point of doing a monochrome sensor is to REMOVE the Anti-Aliasing filter because there is NO color aliasing. There is no Bayer Filter Array on the sensor to start with, so why would you want to fuzzy up the image?? The main strength of a mono sensor is it's twice as sharp as a color one. IOW, it take twice as many Bayer Well Sites to equal the resolution of a given number of mono well site, assuming the optics can resolve both. As a Foveon mentor back in 1999, after being an early Kodak adopter, I learned this lesson well by comparing a cropped 3.2 megapixel (1.6k X 2K) capture on the 3-chip prism camera, to a PhaseOne Lightphase AND a Kodak 560. The Phase One had a 6 MPx Philips Sensor and NO AA filter. The 560 had a 6 MPx sensor with AA filter. By far, Kodak's was the worst performer. Foveon was the best, by a nudge, over the Phase One (that back was on a Hasselblad). We are talking about $30,000 outfits here and not today's amazing camera that cost less than $1,000. So those of us who spent that kind of cash were SERIOUS about digital performance and had to make sure we had clients to pay for it. By the same token, Foveons X3 color sensor in the Sigma SD-10 (best cheap B&W capture also) has full color resolution at every well site, and so, at 3.5 MPx native capture, performs as well or better than most 8 MPx cameras as far as resolution BECAUSE there is not AA or BAYER filter array. Back in 2000, Foveon had a prototype 22x22mm sensor that was monochrome. It was all CMOS, 4k x 4k (16 megapixels). Greg Gorman did a shot of a Cowboy in the proto camera that had accepted Canon lenses. They made a 4 foot by 8 foot print (cropping out 1/2 the image area captured by the sensor!!). At Photokina, everyone thought the image was better than 4x5 film. It would have taken a 36 MPx (6k by 6k) BFA color sensor to perform better than this, assuming the optics could do it. This may bee deemed as my opinion, but I have image files to prove it. I'm currently on my 30th digital camera in 10 years. I only wish the Foveon technology would catch on and they could make bigger sensors. This way you would have all the shapness benefits of a mono sensor, with all of the post-process manipultations of scene renderings during the B&W conversion in Photoshop. In the mean time, I suspect that if Ken Boydston of MegaVision decides to make a Mono Back that also does IR captures, like everything else he has done, someone will copy it. Claude In a message dated 7/10/2005 10:47:24 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com writes: I'd propose an answer to this question. Such a sensor would have no Bayer mosaic, and would have a user-removable IR blocking filter (or no blocking filter at all). In my ideal camera, it would have an anti-aliasing filter (referred to as "blur" filter here earlier), though. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other resources as they are often being updated. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint If you wish to receive no emails or just a daily digest, or you wish to unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting this same page. Please follow these basic guidelines: - As threads develop, trim off excess portions of earlier messages to keep them short. - Good manners are required at all time. No personal attacks or flames. Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the membership without notice. - Keep your posts and threads related to the group topic of digital B&W printing. 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Re: [Digital BW] Digital Zone System via filters
2005-07-12 by Gary Brown
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