12-05-2020 01:24 PM
I have a Canon eos 90d and the photos are over exposed when shooting in non live view mode (when switching back-and-forth between live view and viewfinder modes; the ISO doubles), or another words looking through the viewfinder, the ISO will double. There's no exposure addition or subtraction on exposure stops. I am confused please help!
12-08-2020 10:11 AM
"I was just about to upload pics for this thread, when in fact, the focus points are different, ..."
This means you did not do the test as outlined. You must follow these instructions precisely.
Here they are again...
"... reset the 90D. Set it to P mode, fix ISO to 200. Use just the center focus point and One shot. WB set to daylight. Now go outside on a sunny day a take several general shots. Make sure you have some vertical lines in some of them. Like trees, a fence or buildings, etc. It the 90D makes the great photos it is capable of the camera is working correctly. This means you set something incorrectly for the photos in question."
"I don't have a rocket blower or the like..."
It's not a bad idea to have one but this is not your problem right now.
12-07-2020 12:09 PM
In case no one looked at the link I posted above, here is some information posted by our forum member ray-uk on the DPReview site
"There has been discussion lately about viewfinder and live view metering givin different results, a look at the cameras specification goes some way to explaining this:
80D Viewfinder metering
metering from 7,560 pixel 63 zone meter sensor
Evaluative metering linked to all AF points
Partial metering, 6% of viewfinder centre
Spot metering, 3.8% of viewfinder centre
Centre weighted average metering
80D Live view metering
metering from 24.2 megapixels image sensor
Evaluative metering 315 zones
Partial metering 6.1% of live view screen
Spot metering 2.6% of live view screen
Centre weighted average metering
7D Mk II Viewfinder metering
metering from150,000 pixel 252 zone meter sensor
Evaluative metering linked to all AF points
Partial metering, 6% of viewfinder centre
Spot metering, 1.8% of viewfinder centre
Centre weighted average metering
7D Mk II Live view metering
metering from 20.2 megapixels image sensor
Evaluative metering 315 zones
Partial metering 10% of live view screen
Spot metering 2.6% of live view screen
Centre weighted average metering
--------------------------------------------------------
When photographing a scene that has various dark and light spots it stand to reason that the 2 systems may well give different results depending on where the dark and bright spots are. It looks from the above information that evaluative metering could be more error prone in this respect and centre weighted could give the more consistent results.
I think this just highlights the fact that automated metering, although good in most circumstances still requires a little intelligent input from the user."
12-07-2020 12:49 PM
"When photographing a scene that has various dark and light spots it stand to reason that the 2 systems may well give different results depending on where the dark and bright spots are. It looks from the above information that evaluative metering could be more error prone in this respect and centre weighted could give the more consistent results.
I think this just highlights the fact that automated metering, although good in most circumstances still requires a little intelligent input from the user."
The cited "above information" are specs. That is an extraodinary conclusion to reach just by looking at specs alone.
Personally, I have found Evaluative Metering to be very quite good at metering a subject or a scene. Canon has selected it to be the default metering mode because it works, and it works very well. It is not "error prone" as the article suggests.
12-07-2020 12:22 PM
"I did do outdoor testing and the same issue. I should have thought of this earlier, but I tested it with my Rebel 1Ti and have the same issue although it is much less exagerated, only about 1/3 - 2/3 stop difference."
OK fine, if you did the outdoor test and saw a 1/3 stop, very hard to see BTW, I would consider this normal. If you saw a 2 or 3 stop difference that is not normal and I would suspect the camera or lens is faulty. (After doing the full reset and the basic settings I outlined?)
The next step, without changing any of those basic settings, you need to try a different lens. Do the daylight test again.
12-05-2020 11:17 PM
Also FYI. Shooting in M mode, dialing in my own numbers, once set, if dialed in according to live view (correct exposure stop at 0) then once in OVF the exposure stops indicate a full 2 stops lower. That has my curiosity in gear.
12-06-2020 12:30 AM
Cleared all the camera settings and still OVF adding +2 stops compared to live view. I don't get it.
12-06-2020 06:36 AM - edited 12-06-2020 06:37 AM
Try a different scene, maybe go outside and use your home as a subject. The current scene is quite challenging with extreme brightness differences.
12-05-2020 06:18 PM
12-05-2020 07:38 PM
@vizualequalizer wrote:
Thank you much for the help, not sure these pictures posted correctly, I saved them using DPP4 to included EXIF data, but how are you going to see that from the files posted in my answer? Do I need to include the data separately? Thanks
I do not see any EXIF shooting data.
The images are extremely small, too. Using a non-Canon lens should not be a factor, not at least when it comes to exposure. One seems quite over exposed by at least one stop, while the other is under exposed by at least one stop. Hard to tell with such small images.
Try this experiment outdoors, if you can. You could be looking at a light flicker issue associated with the artificial lighting.
12-05-2020 07:52 PM
When you convert and save try these settings:
09/26/2024: New firmware updates are available.
EOS R5 Mark II - Version 1.0.1
EOS R6 Mark II - Version 1.5.0
07/01/2024: New firmware updates are available.
04/16/2024: New firmware updates are available.
RF100-300mm F2.8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.6
RF400mm F2.8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.6
RF600mm F4 L IS USM - Version 1.0.6
RF800mm F5.6 L IS USM - Version 1.0.4
RF1200mm F8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.4
Canon U.S.A Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without permission is prohibited.