
Originally Posted by
Colin Southern
Hi Peter,
For most cameras, the difference between the two - at base ISO - is about 12 stops - so if you're only photographing a reflective scene (4 stop dynamic range) and you under expose be a stop (pretty typical of what matrix / evaluative metering will do) then the darkest tone recorded is only 5 stops down from the max, and still 7 stops clear of the noise floor - so still pretty clean. If you want to tap into a couple more stops of shadow detail then that's still not a problem (still 5 to spare) ... but when you start getting backlighting (ie active light sources, not just reflected light) then that can easily take up the top 3 stops of dynamic range, and everything else gets shoved down - closer to the noise floor.
Does this answer the question?