jotae escribió:Pues.... yo no sé lo que habrás visto tú en esas pruebas pero, en la segunda, la LX100 sale claramente airosa, incluso, frente a una Fuji X100S a 3200 ISO. Prácticamente en todas las comparativas con otros modelos sale mejor parada. Esta, entre otras muchas pruebas consultadas, me han hecho decidirme por comprar una LX100. Las únicas ventajas de la Sony sobre la LX100 son: la pantalla abatible y el tamaño. Como siempre, todo es cuestión de prioridades.
Copio el texto hasta iso800 , he cruzado el dato (no en el comentario de definición. Tampoco comparto que sean las únicas diferencias, pero ambas son muy buenas cámaras). La prioridad es ayudar en el tema de impresión que pregunta el compañero, así que pego el texto al que aludía.
Sony RX100 III Print Quality
Very good 24 x 36 inch prints at ISO 80/125/200; a good 11 x 14 at ISO 1600; a nice 4 x 6 at ISO 12,800.
ISO 80/125 yield a good 24 x 36 inch print, with nice detail, depth, contrast and color. 36 x 48 inch prints are fine for wall display purposes here.
ISO 200 also prints a good 24 x 36 inch print, with only the mildest hint of noise apparent in flatter areas of our test target.
ISO 400 shots are good at 20 x 30 inches, again with only minor but acceptable noise in shadowy areas of our target.
ISO 800 shows a bit too much noise in these same low contrast areas to call a 16 x 20 inch print "good" here, as we did with the previous two RX100 models, though it's certainly usable for less critical applications. Sharpening and noise reduction at default JPEG settings have increased in aggressiveness compared to the first two models, resulting in a bit sharper detail but at the expense of increasing noise levels. 13 x 19 inch prints work fairly well here.
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Panasonic LX100 Print Quality
Very good 24 x 36 inch prints at ISO 100/200; a nice 13 x 19 at ISO 1600 and a good 4 x 6 at ISO 12,800.
ISO 100/200 prints are quite good at 24 x 36 inches, with crisp detail and rich colors.
ISO 400 shots look good at 20 x 30 inches, retaining good detail throughout our test image. 24 x 36 inch prints aren't bad, with only a minor trace of noise in a few areas, and can generally be used for less critical applications.
ISO 800 yields a good 16 x 20 inch print, which is a nice size for this ISO. There is a definite softening of contrast in our tricky red fabric swatch, common in most cameras by this sensitivity, and mild noise in a few flatter areas, but a very nice print all around.