Chris
Newbie
I need help, please, evaluating results from a test of dead/hot pixels on my new R-D1. Should I be concerned that various exposure and ISO combinations give anywhere from 0 up to 775 hot pixels?
Much detail follows below, including exact results from Dead Pixel Test at 24 different exposure/ISO combinations.
Advice greatly appreciated, as I only have until Thursday to decide whether to return this to the dealer and ask for a replacement or keep it as is. Thanks!
===============================
Hello from a new member who’s trying to evaluate an R-D1 in the mid-4000 range. I’ve got until 11/10 to make a keep or return decision.
First, thanks to all of you who have posted to this forum! I discovered it when Googling for whatever tests and reviews of the R-D1 I could find. There’s tons of great information in the various threads here. You are a very sharing bunch!
By way of background, I’m an amateur photographer, pure and simple. But I’ve been a rangefinder guy for some 40 years now because my introduction to photography was from an uncle who loved and collected both Leicas and Alpas. I primarily shot rangefinders (my uncle’s on occasion and my dad’s Montgomery Ward’s camera, which may well have been a Cosina) during grade school and high school. Since my college years, I’ve shot both SLRs (Alpas, thanks to uncle) and an M6 that I bought in the late 90s when I found I missed the compactness of a rangefinder.
My digital experience is limited to a little Canon S400 Digital ELPH that I bought to have a camera with me on frequent business travel. I love the instantaneous nature of digital photography. That said, I’ve been strictly a point & shoot digital photographer. PS Elements is on my Mac, but I’ve rarely used it. I shoot, download, and show my “slides” on-screen with Graphic Converter. So all of what I’ve read about hot/dead pixels and digital manipulation to eliminate them and things like that are still Greek to me. Not for long, I guess, if I actually keep the R-D1 I’m evaluating and start to learn the full version of Photoshop!
With all the comments in the forum about the return of R-D1s because of dead/hot pixels, I started my research and tests there, using various threads to learn what to do and (I hope) how to do it.
Since I’m on a Mac, I loaded Dead Pixel Test onto my wife’s PC. In a very dark closet, with lens cap on and viewfinder covered, I made 6 RAW exposures — 1/60, 1/30, 1/8, 1/2, 1 second, and approx. 4 seconds — at all 4 ISOs. The film settings, by the way, were at whatever the R-D1 defaults are, as I’ve made no changes to those.
I opened the RAW files in Photoshop Elements 2.0 using the EPSON RAW Plug-In, then saved them as TIFFs (with settings: embed EPSON sRGB Color Space color profile; no image compression; IBM PC byte order). Dead Pixel Test results:
ISO 200:
1/60 – 0 dead/1 hot
1/30 – 0/1
1/8 – 0/0
1/2 – 0/1
1 – 0/4
4 – 0/24
ISO 400:
1/60 – 0 dead/2 hot
1/30 – 0/2
1/8 – 0/1
1/2 – 0/5
1 – 0/12
4 – 0/49
ISO 800:
1/60 – 0 dead/3 hot
1/30 – 0/3
1/8 – 0/6
1/2 – 0/23
1 – 0/34
4 – 0/123
ISO 1600:
1/60 – 0 dead/7 hot
1/30 – 0/14
1/8 – 0/23
1/2 – 0/53
1 – 0/56
4 – 0/775
At the longer exposures and higher ISOs, this seems like a lot of problem pixels to me… but I have no experience on which to make such an evaluation. Do these numbers represent a problem? By the way, I do have a Nocti; and one of the appealing things about the R-D1 is the ability to shoot it in low-light environments. So, I plan to be using 1600 quite a bit.
Pending my understanding of the pixel issue, I haven’t done a great deal of focusing/rangefinder accuracy tests. However, horizontal adjustment does seem to be off, as a distant object lines up in focus, and then I can turn a bit beyond it to the infinity stop on the lens and it goes slightly out of alignment again. This happens with all 4 lenses to what appears to be the same extent. It is not a problem on the M6 with these lenses. But I understand that DAG can take care of this problem.
I’m just back from a long walk around the neighborhood, however, shooting both a 35mm 'cron ASPH 2.0 and my 50mm Elmar 2.8. The shots I took specifically to check focus seems spot on (a bit surprising, considering how rusty my rangefinder technique is after far too much autofocus shooting). I do, however, need to do some ruler tests if this particular body stays in consideration.
Also, I’ve not tried to judge whether the bright-line frames are dead on. I do note that the focusing rectangle seems a bit off-level (catty-wompus, my wife would say) in relationship to the framelines. Also, as I change from 28 to 35 to 50, I see that the framelines shift toward the bottom right of the viewfinder, putting the focusing rectangle more and more toward the upper left-hand corner. That’s normal, I assume.
So, two questions at this point…
1. Do I seem to be doing the pixel test correctly?
2. In and of itself, do these pixel results say “avoid this body” or do they say “no real problem”… or are they indeterminate?
Depending upon what you can tell me, I’ll either continue on to various rangefinder accuracy and focusing tests or return this and continue my hunt for a better R-D1. I do want one of these!!!
And if there are other tests you'd recommend, I'd be happy to hear them. I've combed the threads pretty thoroughly trying to find what various members have done, but I'm sure I've not found everything.
Sincere apologies for the long-winded message here. This appears to be a very friendly forum, so I’ve taken the risk of overwhelming you with some newbie angst in the hopes that one or more of you might be able and willing to offer some guidance.
Thanks!
Chris
Much detail follows below, including exact results from Dead Pixel Test at 24 different exposure/ISO combinations.
Advice greatly appreciated, as I only have until Thursday to decide whether to return this to the dealer and ask for a replacement or keep it as is. Thanks!
===============================
Hello from a new member who’s trying to evaluate an R-D1 in the mid-4000 range. I’ve got until 11/10 to make a keep or return decision.
First, thanks to all of you who have posted to this forum! I discovered it when Googling for whatever tests and reviews of the R-D1 I could find. There’s tons of great information in the various threads here. You are a very sharing bunch!
By way of background, I’m an amateur photographer, pure and simple. But I’ve been a rangefinder guy for some 40 years now because my introduction to photography was from an uncle who loved and collected both Leicas and Alpas. I primarily shot rangefinders (my uncle’s on occasion and my dad’s Montgomery Ward’s camera, which may well have been a Cosina) during grade school and high school. Since my college years, I’ve shot both SLRs (Alpas, thanks to uncle) and an M6 that I bought in the late 90s when I found I missed the compactness of a rangefinder.
My digital experience is limited to a little Canon S400 Digital ELPH that I bought to have a camera with me on frequent business travel. I love the instantaneous nature of digital photography. That said, I’ve been strictly a point & shoot digital photographer. PS Elements is on my Mac, but I’ve rarely used it. I shoot, download, and show my “slides” on-screen with Graphic Converter. So all of what I’ve read about hot/dead pixels and digital manipulation to eliminate them and things like that are still Greek to me. Not for long, I guess, if I actually keep the R-D1 I’m evaluating and start to learn the full version of Photoshop!
With all the comments in the forum about the return of R-D1s because of dead/hot pixels, I started my research and tests there, using various threads to learn what to do and (I hope) how to do it.
Since I’m on a Mac, I loaded Dead Pixel Test onto my wife’s PC. In a very dark closet, with lens cap on and viewfinder covered, I made 6 RAW exposures — 1/60, 1/30, 1/8, 1/2, 1 second, and approx. 4 seconds — at all 4 ISOs. The film settings, by the way, were at whatever the R-D1 defaults are, as I’ve made no changes to those.
I opened the RAW files in Photoshop Elements 2.0 using the EPSON RAW Plug-In, then saved them as TIFFs (with settings: embed EPSON sRGB Color Space color profile; no image compression; IBM PC byte order). Dead Pixel Test results:
ISO 200:
1/60 – 0 dead/1 hot
1/30 – 0/1
1/8 – 0/0
1/2 – 0/1
1 – 0/4
4 – 0/24
ISO 400:
1/60 – 0 dead/2 hot
1/30 – 0/2
1/8 – 0/1
1/2 – 0/5
1 – 0/12
4 – 0/49
ISO 800:
1/60 – 0 dead/3 hot
1/30 – 0/3
1/8 – 0/6
1/2 – 0/23
1 – 0/34
4 – 0/123
ISO 1600:
1/60 – 0 dead/7 hot
1/30 – 0/14
1/8 – 0/23
1/2 – 0/53
1 – 0/56
4 – 0/775
At the longer exposures and higher ISOs, this seems like a lot of problem pixels to me… but I have no experience on which to make such an evaluation. Do these numbers represent a problem? By the way, I do have a Nocti; and one of the appealing things about the R-D1 is the ability to shoot it in low-light environments. So, I plan to be using 1600 quite a bit.
Pending my understanding of the pixel issue, I haven’t done a great deal of focusing/rangefinder accuracy tests. However, horizontal adjustment does seem to be off, as a distant object lines up in focus, and then I can turn a bit beyond it to the infinity stop on the lens and it goes slightly out of alignment again. This happens with all 4 lenses to what appears to be the same extent. It is not a problem on the M6 with these lenses. But I understand that DAG can take care of this problem.
I’m just back from a long walk around the neighborhood, however, shooting both a 35mm 'cron ASPH 2.0 and my 50mm Elmar 2.8. The shots I took specifically to check focus seems spot on (a bit surprising, considering how rusty my rangefinder technique is after far too much autofocus shooting). I do, however, need to do some ruler tests if this particular body stays in consideration.
Also, I’ve not tried to judge whether the bright-line frames are dead on. I do note that the focusing rectangle seems a bit off-level (catty-wompus, my wife would say) in relationship to the framelines. Also, as I change from 28 to 35 to 50, I see that the framelines shift toward the bottom right of the viewfinder, putting the focusing rectangle more and more toward the upper left-hand corner. That’s normal, I assume.
So, two questions at this point…
1. Do I seem to be doing the pixel test correctly?
2. In and of itself, do these pixel results say “avoid this body” or do they say “no real problem”… or are they indeterminate?
Depending upon what you can tell me, I’ll either continue on to various rangefinder accuracy and focusing tests or return this and continue my hunt for a better R-D1. I do want one of these!!!
And if there are other tests you'd recommend, I'd be happy to hear them. I've combed the threads pretty thoroughly trying to find what various members have done, but I'm sure I've not found everything.
Sincere apologies for the long-winded message here. This appears to be a very friendly forum, so I’ve taken the risk of overwhelming you with some newbie angst in the hopes that one or more of you might be able and willing to offer some guidance.
Thanks!
Chris
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