Originally Posted by
Inkanyezi
I couldn't agree more.
I have a pet peeve there, and it is the "exposure" slider. Of course it does nothing about exposure, but the method of operation can be different in different converters. Whatever it does, it does not change exposure.
But there is another problem here as well, and it goes around algorithms for white balancing. Many converters have multipliers for the channels, which can push a channel over the edge when the coefficient is too high. Instead of pulling down the other two, the red channel can be amplified in a way that resembles over-exposure, even though all data is there.
I have read, but not tried, that this is a problem of ACR, but not of Lightroom. I don't remember exactly, but I think it is in the discussion about UNI-WB. There's also where that "exposure" slider comes in. I really hate that it is called exposure, but not so much to do about it. All manipulations done in PP are digital, and they have nothing whatsoever to do with exposure. However they affect the way the image looks.
So it may be important just which RAW converter you use, whether you wish to use UNI-WB or not, and also whether you subscribe to the ETTR mantra or not. There are many converters out there, and it might be worth the while to do some converter shopping.