Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ8

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ8 vs Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 real-life noise


Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ8 results continued…

Outdoor / Resolution / Noise / Noise 2 / Corner sharpness / Fringe & macro / Distortion / Vignetting

To compare noise levels under real-life conditions we shot this scene with the Panasonic Lumix DMC- FZ8 and Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H9 within a few moments using each of their ISO settings. The FZ8’s Noise Reduction was set to Standard.

The zoom lenses of each camera were adjusted to deliver the same field of view; the FZ8 crops show a slightly larger field due to its slightly lower resolution.

The image left was taken with the Panasonic Lumix DMC- FZ8 at 7mm f5.6 and at 100 ISO; the original measured 3.35MB. The crops are taken from an area just below and to the left of the centre.


At 100 ISO, the FZ8 captures and records noticeably greater detail than the Sony H9, which is already suffering from smearing even at its lowest sensitivities. Noise speckles may be visible on the FZ8 at 100 ISO, but at least the detail hasn’t been smudged out through processing – yet.

Increased to just 200 ISO though, the FZ8 begins to apply more noise reduction than we’d like and the finest details are already lost – just compare the foliage details between this and the first crop.

At 400 ISO, there’s a significant loss in quality, both in terms of detail and saturation. At 800 and 1600 ISO the situation becomes worse still, and the less said about the 3200 ISO High Sensitivity preset, the better. To be fair though, the Sony H9 certainly doesn’t perform any better, but neither are cameras you’d want to use at anything other than their lowest sensitivities if you can avoid them. And given the choice between the two models, we’d say the FZ8 easily wins in terms of image quality at 100 ISO with the default settings.

While you are stuck with the default settings on the Sony H9 though, Panasonic does at least allow you to reduce – or increase – the noise reduction if desired, and we have examples at the bottom of the page. For more real-life results at different ISO settings, check out our FZ8 Gallery.

Support this site by shopping via these links

 

Panasonic Lumix FZ8 - 80 ISO not available

Panasonic Lumix FZ8
(STD Noise Reduction / default setting)
 
Sony Cyber-shot H9
(default settings)
  Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 80 ISO
80 ISO not available
 
80 ISO
     
Panasonic Lumix FZ8 at 100 ISO   Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 90 ISO
100 ISO
 
100 ISO
     
Panasonic Lumix FZ8 at 200 ISO   Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 200 ISO
200 ISO
 
200 ISO
     
Panasonic Lumix FZ8 at 400 ISO   Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 400 ISO
400 ISO
 
400 ISO
     
Panasonic Lumix FZ8 at 800 ISO   Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 800 ISO
800 ISO
 
800 ISO
     
Panasonic Lumix FZ8 at 1250 ISO   Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 1600 ISO
1250 ISO
 
1600 ISO
     
Panasonic Lumix FZ8 at 3200 ISO   Sony Cyber-shot H9 at 3200 ISO
3200 ISO (High Sensitivity preset)
 
3200 ISO


Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ8 Noise Reduction comparison

The Panasonic Lumix FZ8 offers three different Noise Reduction options: LOW, STD and HIGH, with STD being the default setting. To see how they compared we took a series of images using all three settings straight after each other, and at every ISO setting. Note the shots below were taken moments apart, but on a different day to those samples above.

The effect of noise reduction can clearly be seen on the rooftops, where speckles on the first column are smoothed out until there’s no little or no surface detail remaining in the final column. As before, the foliage areas are also casualties of noise reduction and show considerable loss in detail as the sensitivity is increased, especially so in the right hand column.

We’re not surprised the HIGH noise reduction setting is over-zealous, but hoped the LOW option could leave a little more detail to work with than the default STD setting. In its defence, there is arguably a little more detail in the crops taken with LOW noise reduction over standard, but it’s pretty subtle and requires a serious amount of pixel-peeping. Interestingly the biggest difference is at 1250 ISO, and while there’s certainly more to work with on the LOW sample, it’s hardly now become a practical option.

While we appreciate the inclusion of noise reduction settings in any compact or superzoom, especially one priced as low as the FZ8, the fact is this lower setting hasn’t made a great deal of difference. The FZ8 remains a camera you really want to use at 100 or 200 ISO.

For more real-life results at different ISO settings, check out our FZ8 Gallery.

Support this site by shopping via these links

 
 
 
 
 

Panasonic Lumix FZ8
LOW Noise Reduction
 
Panasonic Lumix FZ8
STD Noise Reduction (default)
 
Panasonic Lumix FZ8
HIGH Noise Reduction
Panasonic FZ8 at 100 ISO - LOW NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 100 ISO - STD NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 100 ISO - HIGH NR
100 ISO
 
100 ISO
 
100 ISO
         
Panasonic FZ8 at 200 ISO - LOW NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 200 ISO - STD NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 200 ISO - HIGH NR
200 ISO
 
200 ISO
 
200 ISO
         
Panasonic FZ8 at 400 ISO - LOW NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 400 ISO - STD NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 400 ISO - HIGH NR
400 ISO
 
400 ISO
 
400 ISO
         
Panasonic FZ8 at 800 ISO - LOW NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 800 ISO - STD NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 800 ISO - HIGH NR
800 ISO
 
800 ISO
 
800 ISO
         
Panasonic FZ8 at 1250 ISO - LOW NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 1250 ISO - STD NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 1250 ISO - HIGH NR
1250 ISO
 
1250 ISO
 
1250 ISO
         
Panasonic FZ8 at 3200 ISO - LOW NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 3200 ISO - STD NR   Panasonic FZ8 at 3200 ISO - HIGH NR
3200 ISO (High Sensitivity preset)
 
3200 ISO (High Sensitivity preset)
 
3200 ISO (High Sensitivity preset)
Buy Gordon a coffee to support cameralabs!

Like my reviews? Buy me a coffee!

Follow Gordon Laing

All words, images, videos and layout, copyright 2005-2022 Gordon Laing. May not be used without permission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Website design by Coolgrey