Hi there, just read this thread.
To confirm, Raw has the banding or not? JPEG may have sharpening+contrast applied that's why it's more obvious. The banding can be any angle depending on the frequency of that noise. Try tuning your TV to encoded cable channels and you will get my meaning.
If it's always present...
Yup, it's also present in the ORF (RAW) format files as previously mentioned. Another member NMSS_2 and I have inspected the ORFs and verified that they are still there.
Banding is always because of interference, which means the noise comes regularly from somewhere between the sensor to the ADC, or caused by a part near the sensor giving out too much radiation (esp high speed components).
Possibly. Something within my E-330's body that hasn't been replaced. Otherwise, why is the loaned E-330 unit much better? Interference from lenses also can be ruled out, I guess, as it appears when using my 14-45, 14-54, 35macro, 40-150.
If it's always there it could be electrical noise, but you said the camera needs to warm up. If it needs to warm up, it could be that some capacitor-type of part inside is either out-of-spec/faulty or not connected/soldered properly.
Highly suspected... that's why I find the old story about the old Nikon DSLR having banding quite intriguing.
To add a bit, the Sony Alpha also has banding issues when shooting ISO1600. It leads me to think that having high ISO picks up all sorts of noise not just visible. Must remember that sensors not only see visible light, some can see IR some can see UV.
I hope that the case of the Sony Alpha does not lower the industry standard and one day everyone insists (well, maybe to the exception of Canon) that banded noise is 'normal', and all high ISO pics look like bad TV reception.
LOL if it's out of wty u might try to slip in a piece of antistatic wrapper from a hard disk around the back of the NMOS if possible. lol.
I'm getting crazy enough to try it... but note also that interference also travels by conduction, and it can be more significant compared to radiation EM intereference.
If it's only JPEG... then it's really a bug in the "engine". Something simple like putting an extra 00 can cause banding. There was an old bug in Netscape that added regularly carriage returns to mp3 files causing regular blips. Not related but just to show you the idea.
That would be a really simple fix to the FW... but alas I doubt it is. Besides, JPEG compression algorithms are so mature and commonplace I doubt that what's used in the FW was developed in-house or from scratch by Olympus.
Sorry I can't help except to give more info as far as I know. I really empathise with you, when the device is a lemon by design or poor QC. Writing a personal email higher up can help. Or maybe try Phil Askey. But my experience with Olympus is that they just replace the whole PCB, no real diagnostics done.
My feeling is that it's already a small lemon by design. Mild banding is widely reported. I can live with what I've seen of those mild banding.
My unit (and that of Blu-by-U's) is a big lemon. It's banding is far from mild, and I'm surprised it didn't got caught at the factory QC level. Maybe they should not be taking high ISO test shots at bright areas....
From my own experience with product development, at the field level, they'll just diagnose to the level of a whole subsystem that's suspected of being faulty and then they'll swap out the whole subsystem and retest for the defect to reoccur. Detailed diagnosis is left to engineers who may be 2nd or 3rd generation in the that product's development... and if it's escalated enough to seem serious. Usually, there's a detailed step-by-step diagnosis and repair guides prepared for both field repair and factory rework (ie. repair units that failed QC to salvage yield).