S
Stan98103
Guest
I did some testing with conversion of the M8 dng file from digital outback to tiff files versus conversion of raw files from my Nikon D200. Here are the results.
The M8 dng file from Digital Outback is 10.6 Mb. When I open this dng file in CS2 using Adobe Camera Raw with auto turn off and no other adjustments and save it in PSCS2 as an uncompressed tif file the size is 60 Mb.
A typical nef file from my D200 is around 16 Mb. If I convert a typical D200 nef file to a dng file using Adobe Digital Negative Converter (ver 3.4x89 with preference JPEG Preview none, Compressed lossless, Preserve Raw image, Don’t embed original), the resulting dng files are typically around 9 Mb. When I open either an original D200 nef file or the corresponding converted D200 dng file in ACR and save it in PSCS2 as an uncompressed tif file the resulting files are indistinguishable (overall appearance, file size, information on the histogram palate) and the file size is typically around 37 Mb.
I have repeated the above conversions with similar results on a dozen other M8 dng files (firmware ver 1.06) that I shot myself at a Leica demo day on Saturday at Kenmore Camera in Seattle. Those files also started life as 10 Mb dng files and ended up as 60 Mb uncompressed tiff files by the procedure outlined above.
Although the M8 dng files that I converted are different images than those from my D200 nef files, it seem like the M8 dng files somehow hold more information as reflected in the larger size of the resulting tif files (60Mb for M8 vs 37 Mb for D200). This is most probably because M8 dng files are 16-bit whereas Nikon nef files are only 14-bit.
Here is one more curious result from the M8 dng files which occurs for both the Digital Outback dng file and the M8 dng files that I shot myself. If an original dng file is processed with Adobe DNG Converter (ver 3.4x89 with preference JPEG Preview none, Compressed lossless, Preserve Raw image, Don’t embed original), the resulting dng file is only around 7 Mb! If that 7Mb compressed dng file is then opened in ACR and saved in PSCS2 as an uncompressed tiff file it is indistinguishable (overall appearance, file size, information on the histogram palate) from the tiff file produced by the original M8 dng file. Maybe that’s not surprising since the conversion is designated as “lossless”.
So how can Leica get 10Mb of 16-bit data into a 10Mb dng file? My guess is that they have developed some extremely powerful lossless compression algorithms for writing the original dng files in the camera. It also is interesting that these dng files can be further compressed by about 30% in a lossless manner with Adobe DNG Converter.
I’ll post my general impressions of the hour a spent with the M8 later this week.
Cheers,
Stan
BTW, I find it highly unlikely that the Leica dng files are 8-bit rather than 16-bit as purported in some threads. Would any car company launch a new car that it was staking its reputation on claiming that it had 8-cylinders when it really only had 4? Leica knows people will be looking under the hood.
The M8 dng file from Digital Outback is 10.6 Mb. When I open this dng file in CS2 using Adobe Camera Raw with auto turn off and no other adjustments and save it in PSCS2 as an uncompressed tif file the size is 60 Mb.
A typical nef file from my D200 is around 16 Mb. If I convert a typical D200 nef file to a dng file using Adobe Digital Negative Converter (ver 3.4x89 with preference JPEG Preview none, Compressed lossless, Preserve Raw image, Don’t embed original), the resulting dng files are typically around 9 Mb. When I open either an original D200 nef file or the corresponding converted D200 dng file in ACR and save it in PSCS2 as an uncompressed tif file the resulting files are indistinguishable (overall appearance, file size, information on the histogram palate) and the file size is typically around 37 Mb.
I have repeated the above conversions with similar results on a dozen other M8 dng files (firmware ver 1.06) that I shot myself at a Leica demo day on Saturday at Kenmore Camera in Seattle. Those files also started life as 10 Mb dng files and ended up as 60 Mb uncompressed tiff files by the procedure outlined above.
Although the M8 dng files that I converted are different images than those from my D200 nef files, it seem like the M8 dng files somehow hold more information as reflected in the larger size of the resulting tif files (60Mb for M8 vs 37 Mb for D200). This is most probably because M8 dng files are 16-bit whereas Nikon nef files are only 14-bit.
Here is one more curious result from the M8 dng files which occurs for both the Digital Outback dng file and the M8 dng files that I shot myself. If an original dng file is processed with Adobe DNG Converter (ver 3.4x89 with preference JPEG Preview none, Compressed lossless, Preserve Raw image, Don’t embed original), the resulting dng file is only around 7 Mb! If that 7Mb compressed dng file is then opened in ACR and saved in PSCS2 as an uncompressed tiff file it is indistinguishable (overall appearance, file size, information on the histogram palate) from the tiff file produced by the original M8 dng file. Maybe that’s not surprising since the conversion is designated as “lossless”.
So how can Leica get 10Mb of 16-bit data into a 10Mb dng file? My guess is that they have developed some extremely powerful lossless compression algorithms for writing the original dng files in the camera. It also is interesting that these dng files can be further compressed by about 30% in a lossless manner with Adobe DNG Converter.
I’ll post my general impressions of the hour a spent with the M8 later this week.
Cheers,
Stan
BTW, I find it highly unlikely that the Leica dng files are 8-bit rather than 16-bit as purported in some threads. Would any car company launch a new car that it was staking its reputation on claiming that it had 8-cylinders when it really only had 4? Leica knows people will be looking under the hood.
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