| Re: Why custom fuction for iso 100? It's possible that running at ISO 100 will provide too much light for the sensor - each pixel in a CCD is a potential well which charge builds up in. If too much light hits the sensor, that could theoretically overflow and saturate at a certain charge. Modern imagers generally have electronics to collect the overflowed charge and disipate it before it smears the image. However, all of that overflowed charge is lost - so any light captured above a certain threshold will not be integrated into the image. Kind of like slowly pouring a water into a bowl to record its mass - if you pour so much that it flows over, that additional water won't add to the total mass recorded by the scale.
Theoretically, if that happened and your amplification was too low the imager would saturate at a level lower than the maximum sampled level resulting in a reduced dynamic range (ie any brightness past, say 240 would be recorded as 240 - easy to fix, but you loose 6% of your dynamic range in doing so). With that, your optimal image quality would likely be at the level of amplification (ISO) that just placed the top sampling level at the saturation level of the imager (in this case, seemingly 200iso).
Although, given that, the lower ammount of amplification would still generate less noise than the higher optimal ISO level (not that noise should be much of a problem at 200iso) - you'd just pay a penalty of loosing highlight details near the top of the scale. Likely, the effect isn't that bad, as images usually get downsampled from 12-bits to 8-bits/channel anyway - providing headroom not to loose any tonal detail. What you would loose is a portion of the camera's ability to record a wide range of lighting in the same scene.
Canon likely added it as a custom function so that the user knew that ISO 100 wouldn't necessarilly give them a better image than 200. Once the user understands that, they can enable the function and use that ISO if 200 is problematic for their purposes. For users who don't want to deal with the details, ISO 100 won't be available and the standard procedure of setting the ISO for the lowest usable level will provide them with the best possible image.
Just a guess though [img]images/icons/smile.gif[/img]
[ October 18, 2001: Message edited by: tsapiano ] |