09-28-2015 01:26 AM
Dear Firends,
When I took some shoots of today's blood moon, found all of the photos shown 1 red pixel and may be 3 other white pixels at different places.
I took more at different speeds and different ISO, all of them have the 1 red pixel and others.
Does it have defect sensor?
I have been using it for more than 4 years.
Does you have any opinioins?
Thanks a lot!!
09-28-2015 01:46 AM
09-29-2015 12:36 PM
@Peter wrote:
It is normal. Enable long time noise reduction. You can also search on google about "remove hot pixel canon" or use a raw converter with automatic hot pixel remover.
If the problem is noise, then long exposure noise reduction may indeed be the answer.
Hot pixels are another matter. They may have been normal ten years ago, but they're not normal now.
09-30-2015 04:37 AM - last edited on 09-30-2015 03:23 PM by Danny
Hot pixels are very normal. You maybe use Lightroom that automatically removes hot pixels? I have hot pixels it in Canon D30, 1000D, 7D and 6D. I use Darktable and RawTherapee so I see the hot pixels before I remove them in the software.
Long exposure noise reduction is a dark frame thingy to remove hot pixels. You can do it manually taking a dark frame after your picture and then substract the hot pixels in GIMP/Photoshop. You maybe are thinking of High ISO noise reduction to remove noise?
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09-30-2015 05:37 AM - last edited on 09-30-2015 03:24 PM by Danny
An example
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The two first files without long time noise reduction, and the last one with. Plenty of hot pixels in the first two.
09-30-2015 09:16 AM - edited 09-30-2015 09:17 AM
Those are simply guesses without seeing a example. Can you u/l one here?
Actually there are three kinds of pixel malfunction. Dead, stuck and hot pixels.
Dead pixels are totally gone. They get no power.
Stuck pixels always receive power, which results in a colored pixel that shows up in the same spot. The colors can be red, green, blue or any combination. Unlike dead pixels, stuck pixels do not change their color from picture to picture. Stuck pixels are common.
Hot pixels only show up when the camera sensor gets hot during long exposures. Hot pixels are very normal and they will show up on every brand of camera.
Unfortunately you cannot fix dead, stuck or hot pixels yourself. But if you are a Lightroom or ACR Photoshop user they can be automatically mapped out.
But we need a sample.
09-30-2015 03:17 PM
Well, you also have this little thingy, https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=WJBuGhMnvFo
Works for some people, doesn´t work for others. It has worked before for me, but not now when I am trying again.
09-30-2015 06:13 PM
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