while the scanners may output a 16bit signal that doesn't mean
it is truly resolving 16 bits. Noise could dominate well before
you get down to that level of resolution.
JCO

-----Original Message-----
From: Jostein [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, October 23, 2004 4:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: istD bit depth


Shel,
I think what John is saying is that it takes significantly more power to
compute the four extra bits per pixel between 12 and 16. You'd need much
stronger number-crunching logic around the chip, and more RAM as well,
to make processing of the image from chip to storage medium go
reasonably quick. With a scanner you accept a much longer exposure time
per "shot" than you would with a DSLR.

Cameras can have 14 or 16 bit depth, and a price tag to match...:-)

Jostein

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Shel Belinkoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 23, 2004 9:51 PM
Subject: Re: istD bit depth


> Hi John ...
>
> Couldn't forget that linear stuff since I never knew it <vbg>
>
> Don't really understand the 2D thing.  Are there two rows of pixels,
one
> below the other?  Nah, that can't be it?  So how come the 'blad can
have a
> 16-bit sensor, and some DSLR cameras 14-bit?  Is it a matter of
space
> (which is what I'm inferring from your remarks)?  I heard talk of a
Nikon
> D3 with a 16-bit sensor, BTW ...
>
> Shel
>
>
> > [Original Message]
> > From: John Francis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Date: 10/23/2004 12:42:22 PM
> > Subject: Re: istD bit depth
> >
> > Shel Belinkoff mused:
> > >
> > > The istD has a bit depth of 12.  I seem to recall some DSLR with
a bit
> > > depth of 14 ... maybe.  The specs on the new Hasselblad claim a
bit
> depth
> > > of 16.  Why is it that so many DSLR cameras are using a bit
depth of
> 12?
> > > Is there a physical or design reason?  Cost?  My little Nikon
scanner
> has a
> > > bit depth of 16 ... why not a DSLR?
> > >
> > > Shel
> >
> > Don't forget that your scanner only has a single row of sensors,
not a
> > two-dimensional array, and that it only has to work at a single
speed.
> >
> > Of the two, the fact that it's only a linear sensor is more
important.
> > You can put the extra processing elements, etc., alongside the
sensor
> > without having to worry too much how much room they take up.  In a
2D
> > sensor you're trying to put another row of pixels there.
>
>

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