My D you say.
I have never noticed them before,but then it might have something to do with you shooting high iso and the background.Alot of my D shots have open sky and grass, so i might have missed them.

Dust i just clone out. I'd say do the same for the stuck pixel.

I'll have to look closer to my newer shots and see if i can see anything.

Dave(now owner of the D200 and Tamron 90mm macro) Brooks



Quoting Aaron Reynolds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

Dave, that's from your D. The spots I'm asking about are on the player's chin, on the jersey logo and on the Nikon sign. So they're not dust -- how does one get these bad pixels in the first place, and how does one get rid of them?

-Aaron

-----Original Message-----

From:  David J Brooks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subj:  Re: Why dustproblems ? (WasRE: *ist D vs DS2, some questions)
Date:  Thu Mar 30, 2006 10:35 am
Size:  641 bytes
To:  [email protected]

Poping in late on this one.

I don't see any dust Aaron, but i see 1 bad pixel, upper left.

Dust on my sensors shows up as dark grayish blobs. A good hurricane
blow seems to work best.

FWIW i seem to have more dust problems on the D than with the Nikons.

Dave

> Here's a chunk out of the middle of a file, unresized, unsharpened,
> uncorrected, compressed a little more for the web.  It clearly shows a
> couple of the mean dusties I'm talking about (plus some not-so-bad
> ones):
>
> http://aaronreynolds.ca/albums/PDML/dust.jpg
>
> Is this out-of-the-ordinary for an *ist D?

Equine Photography in York Region





Equine Photography in York Region

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