It's more complex than that
The camera doesn't just write the image to card - it has to process the image as well. This means:
- all the colour correction, sharpness, saturation etc. treatment that you have defined
- convert to JPG and/or convert to RAW with the parameters you have defined (12 bits/14 bits)
- write the JPG and/or the RAW file to card
My D300 can do up to 8 images/second. A RAW file is about 15 MB and a JPG about 2MB. That's quite a lot of data to process. I think that the internal buffer is used to hold data that is waiting to be treated by the image processor as well as data that is waiting to be written out
Re: It's more complex than that
Quote:
Originally Posted by Franglais
The camera doesn't just write the image to card - it has to process the image as well. This means:
- all the colour correction, sharpness, saturation etc. treatment that you have defined
- convert to JPG and/or convert to RAW with the parameters you have defined (12 bits/14 bits)
- write the JPG and/or the RAW file to card
My D300 can do up to 8 images/second. A RAW file is about 15 MB and a JPG about 2MB. That's quite a lot of data to process. I think that the internal buffer is used to hold data that is waiting to be treated by the image processor as well as data that is waiting to be written out
Again, thanks for the information. I've been thinking about this whole issue a bit more since posting the original message in this thread, and I have another question. I'm trying to understand what happens immediately after snapping a photo. As you point out, the camera needs to do processing on the image, so I imagine that right after the picture is taken that all the data gets shipped off to the image processor. You might be right that the buffer queues data waiting to be processed by the image processor. Once the image processor is done doing its thing with an image, does the picture get written to the storage card at that time?
Also, I assume that the image gets written to the card automatically and does not need to be transferred by the user. Is that assumption correct?
My cell phone writes to internal storage and I have to go in a move each picture to card one-by-one, so I thought that I should be clear on that point just to make sure. Granted, a digital SLR is much more sophisticated than a cell phone, which is why I assume that the transfer is done automatically. Still, thought I should just verify that.
The camera has been shipped and should be here in time for the Thunderbirds performance later this month. SA-weet!
Thanks for any help that you can offer.
--Tom