Sorry, no resolution chart but my CD-Collection. Stills were exported using mpegstreamclip. In the AVCHD Stills, Gamma was raised for better comparison. I guess, if I used the soft SLR-Magic 0,95 instead of the 14-140 lens kit for the "sharpness test", the difference in sharpness would be unnoticable. Not noticable in the stills but more noticable in the moving image: Lesser "mudding" in dark areas (I hope it is the right term) and lesser banding with MJPEG, I guess because of more noise? A sharper MJPEG with spanning (recording stops after 2:47mins/1.99gb on Sandisk SDXC Extreme Pro/64gb) and with better audio (seems to be restricted to PCM with 16kHz sampling frequency) MJPEG would be heaven to my eye. All the best, Frame
According to cbrandin's recent investigations, the AVCHD encoder's highest quality quantization factors used for shadow detail are around 18-20.
Is this information still accurate? Is there any thing that limits the IQ that can be achieved by low luminance regions (putting noise aside).
That's not quite right. Depending on matrices, the effective QP can be much lower (lower is better). Going lower than 5 is a waste (because that's for 10-bit, not 8-bit). The new "soft" matrices produce an Effective QP of 5 (for DC value) in many cases, which is ideal, when the PTool quantization parameter is set to 18. Other settings can achieve this too. You can determine the minimum effective QP value by using the JM-SP decoder in StreamParser. The DC value is the lowest effective QP value for each frame. Basically, the quantization parameters by themselves are meaningless because they are processed with matrices to get the final, effective QP - which is what is important.
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