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If you`re shooting digital, the largest image sensor you will find at your local camera store is the 53.4mm x 40.1mm medium format sensors inside something like the Phase One IQ3. But if that is just not enough for you... there is one, much larger option. Meet the $106,000 LargeSense LS911: a large format digital camera and purportedly the `world`s first 8x10 digital single shot camera for sale.`
The LS911 is the passion project of Bill Charbonnet, who left his desk job in 2014 to start LargeSense LLC and built these large-format digital cameras. Four years later, the LS911 is his first shipping product.
According to the press materials, LS911 features a 12-megapixel 9x11-inch monochrome CMOS sensor (that translates into massive 75 micron pixels), ISO that can be set at either 2100 or 6400, 900GB of internal storage, and the ability to output files to DNG, 16-bit TIFF, 32-bit TIFF, RAW and JPEG formats. There is no CFA, but the monochrome sensor can be used to produce color images (of non-moving subjects) using an in-built 3-shot system and color filters.
Oh, and the thing can also apparently shoot 4K, 3840 × 2160 video at 26fps using its electronic shutter.
Here is a video of the LS911 in action:
And here is how the size of the LargeSense LS911 sensor compares to some of the other image sensors out there:
Note: the LargeSense LS45 is a 4x5-inch digital back Charbonnet is working on, but has yet to release.
If the LS911 seems a bit bonkers, honestly, that`s because it is. We`ve been discussing it in the office for the past couple of days, trying to figure out how to put this camera in context for our readers, and here`s our take: it`s cool, but having a sensor this large may not be as advantageous as you think.
Science Editor Rishi Sanyal explai ...
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