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Post by allietan on Jul 2, 2011 15:14:32 GMT 8
Was using the Canon 600D to shoot an office event indoors. Noticed that the image at ISO 1600 is quite noisy, is this normal? ISO 1600, 1/45, F3.5, no flash, in-camera noise reduction set at Low, increase fill light post editing, no noise reduction at post editing 100% crop Or did I get some settings wrong? Even some shots taken outside with ISO 200 was not as clean and sharp as the 450D ISO 200, 1/90, F3.5, no flash, no editing, 100% crop Since the 600D and 60D both have the same sensor, anyone else has the same problem? Do I need to bring it in to Canon?
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Post by Cecil Chan on Jul 2, 2011 17:24:55 GMT 8
Yeah does seem noisy, luminance noise looks like. under warranty no harm in sending for a look, I did that with mine and they change one for me.
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Post by allietan on Jul 2, 2011 22:04:57 GMT 8
Ok, thanks for your advice Chief. Will bring it down to Canon for a look see. Some of the indoor images also had blue outline around the people's green collar and hands... weird. So it's the sensor that needs checking right?
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Post by Cecil Chan on Jul 2, 2011 22:34:03 GMT 8
that looks like fringing, likely from the lens? can anybody else shed some lights? when you send them to canon show them the pictures or they will say they see nothing wrong, they didn't believe until I showed them the color noise.
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Post by allietan on Jul 2, 2011 22:58:53 GMT 8
I don't think the fringing is due to the lens fault. I'm using the same kit lens that I got when I bought the 450D, and I had no problems with fringing with that camera. In fact, the 450D didn't have such noise and colour probelms..... QC on the 600D body I got not good
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nmss2
Full Member
Posts: 303
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Post by nmss2 on Jul 3, 2011 15:59:39 GMT 8
looks more like image algorithm that canon uses for the newer body.
450d outdoor images looks hell bad for its noise reduction. All details have been cleaned out.
you have to send in the blue outline issue. it is definitely not acceptable for a decent image.
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Post by allietan on Jul 15, 2011 9:08:00 GMT 8
The bad images were due to the sensor. Canon changed the sensor for me. Is this a common problem for new models?
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Post by Cecil Chan on Jul 15, 2011 11:10:35 GMT 8
There are always a certain percentage of production quality fallout - you just happen to be unlucky to get one of those thts all but since they change one for you, alls well that ends well.
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