sleepyhead
Well-known
Anyone who would shell out $5000 + for a digital camera body with a 36 x 24mm sensor that only produces black and white needs their head examined IMO!
YMMV of course! 😀
Yes, agreed!
Anyone who would shell out $5000 + for a digital camera body with a 36 x 24mm sensor that only produces black and white needs their head examined IMO!
YMMV of course! 😀
I thought that pixels as we get them in our image files were a combination of 3 receptors. i.e. Green, Red and Blue receptors. My asumption was that turning them all into luminance receptors would effectively give you three times as many pixels. Obviously I'm wrong on that one.
You're thinking of the Foveon sensor, which has three layers, each devoted to red, blue or green.
My understanding is that normal CMOS and CCD's determine RGB values at each sensor site by way of the Bayer filter. Each pixel measures the red, blue and green levels at that point; there is no separate receptor for each colour.
Anyone who would shell out $5000 + for a digital camera body with a 36 x 24mm sensor that only produces black and white needs their head examined IMO!
May I ask why? I'm a color photographer, but I could not say what you just said as an absolute.
You're right Keith... didn't notice the IMO.
I knew you were around and I wasn't about to take any unecessary risks! 😛
That is the Foveon story. it s a nice enough sensor, but marketing remains marketing.