ConstantProduction wrote:
So how does it debayer in-camera?
The Pocket cam sensor is basically the same as the BMCC, except it is cropped/windowed to be 1920x1080 active photosites instead of 2400x1350. The act of debayering either camera results in a video file, or image frame of either 1920x1080 pixels or 2400x1350. Note I am saying that the frame of video is that RESOLUTION, not that it has the resolving power of 1920x1080 or 2400x1350.
Since debayering is interpolation, each pixel of the debayered image contains information - some of which will have been derived from the debayering process rather than was captured at that specific photosite. So a green photosite has its Red and Blue values interpolated from the surrounding photosites. The result is indeed an image of the same resolution, albeit with interpolated chroma data.
Irrespective of this - the image is still 1920x1080 on the Pocket cam and 2400x1350 on the BMCC- in terms of image resolution.
The BMCC when scaled down to 1920x1080 using various methods of scaling such as bilinear scaling, yields an image of higher resolving power - closer to resolving 1080 lines (it won't actually resolve 1080 lines). The Pocket camera, will still produce a 1920x1080 image, but its resolving power will be much lower, lower than 1080 lines and lower than the BMCC.
I think the problem here is the confusion between image resolution and resolving power.
The reason that the Raw 1080p video of the pocket camera will be better quality in terms of sharpness than when filming prores - is because of the fact that different debayering methods produce different levels of quality. It is likely that the internal debayering method will not be as good as one done by say Resolve or Adobe Raw. Another reason is because the ProRes video is 4:2:2 - so some of the chroma data is discarded.
NOTE: Before anyone restarts the same old confusion between chroma sub-sampling and bayer sensors - they are not the same, the effect of compressing video by chroma sub-sampling is fairly uniform whereas the quality of chroma data from debayering is very varied and not at all uniform - they are not the same thing.
So in conclusion:
The resolution of the pocket camera is 1920x1080 - the resolving power can be worked out by smarter people than I, or with people who actually have the camera in their hands right now and a test chart.
After debayering - the image is still 1920x1080.