By the way, iso research build doesn’t work on 5d2 (2019Mar23.5D2212.zip). It can’t power off the camera – both leds stay on for long (not 2-3 sec, as described – long enough to panic) [I needed some time to get the card door trick].
Another finding, which makes me exited. After reading the nice article from RawDigger developers (
https://www.rawdigger.com/howtouse/iso-is-seldom-just-digital-gain) I ran into checking my own files from 5D2. With such a histogram it takes just several minutes to know, that the most interesting ISOs were 160, 320 and 640 – with clear signs of data division. All others look like pulled up (with periodic gaps in the histogram). That just proved what everybody told (but I’m a hard believer).
But that’s not the end of the story. I continued checking files from my archive and found a batch of files with ISO100 and ISO50 (which is supposed to be complete fake) – with absolutely smooth histogram – no gaps, no spikes. How could it be so? It was hard to reproduce them: finally I grasped it. With EMF chip attached (telling f1.4) or an AF lens I get gaps in the histogram. Without electrical connection to the lens – histogram is nice and smooth. Peripheral lighting correction is disabled, so I can’t guess what kind of correction is applied here. Should we avoid it?
It needs much more testing in the terms of noise and impact on real images. Taking a break now. Maybe, I’m completely wrong…
Continued:
I’ve checked results with Canon 50mm lens:
At f/1.4 – each 13th value in the histogram has a gap. It becomes less noticeable at closed diaphragms.
f/1.4 - each 13th
1.8-25
2.8-31
2.2-43
2.5-55
2.8-84(85)
3.2-70
I can’t imagine any fair reason to use pull up at open apertures. Just maybe their lenses lacked light at open apertures and canon gays are simply cheating to satisfy specs? Looks rather probable.
In any case it would be nice to disable this pull up if somebody finds it.