Sony a7R II Uncompressed RAW File Size & Software Support

Sony a7R II Uncompressed Raw

Here are Sony a7R II Uncompressed RAW file size and software compatibility after running Sony a7R II Firmware Update 2.00

 

Sony a7R II Uncompressed Raw File Size:

  • Sony a7R II Compressed RAW are approximately 41 Mb
  • Sony a7RII Uncompressed RAW are approximately 81.6 Mb
  •  
    If you find compressed RAWs too small and uncompressed RAWs too big, you can run uncompressed RAWs through Adobe DNG Converter 9.2

  • Sony a7R II DNG (No Preview) vary from approximately 44.6-47.3 Mb
  • Sony a7R II DNG (Medium Preview) vary from approximately 44.7-47.4 Mb
  • Sony a7R II DNG (Fullsize Preview) vary from approximately 48.8-50.3 Mb
  •  

    Sony a7RII Uncompressed Raw Software Support:

  • Lightroom CC 2015.2.1
  • Lightroom 6.2.1
  • Photoshop 2015.01
  • Adobe DNG Converter 9.2
  • UPDATE: Capture One 8.3.4 Support added 10/27/15
  •  

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    30 thoughts on “Sony a7R II Uncompressed RAW File Size & Software Support”

    1. I’ve been converting my Canon 5DII RAW files to DNG for years with no issues. Is this the case with the A7rII as well, that there is no visible difference between the original RAW and the DNG?

      1. Depends which RAW you mean. DNG are slightly larger than compressed RAW but considerably smaller than uncompressed RAW. I doubt most people could see a difference between the three formats.

      1. Lossless compression is still a form of compression but for 99.9% of well-exposed photographs, most people will find it extremely hard to see any difference between Sony compressed, uncompressed and DNG.

        1. Hi, I’m a software engineer, I just wanted to provide some information as the answer above isn’t completely accurate.

          TL;DR “is there any loss when converting the uncompressed RAW to DNG?”

          NO! Zero loss at all, when converted to TIFF they will be identical pixel for pixel so long as you do not have the “Use lossy compression” option checked in the DNG converter. Now the long version…

          Not exactly. Well, yes, it is indeed a form of compression but to say “it’s still a form of compression” is a misleading statement based on the context of the question you were responding to. Lossless compression is completely and 100% indistinguishable from an uncompressed file. Once uncompressed, they are bit for bit, completely identical (and if anyone’s wondering, in the case of lossless compression the data is completely useless to anything other than the decompression algorithm in the compressed state). The only functional difference is that the file is required to go through a decompression algorithm before the imaging software can use the file and this requires additional processing time. On the other hand, a file saved with lossless compression is smaller so less time will be spent reading it from the media. As to the performance difference you will see between the two… it will only be present whilst reading and decompressing the file. Once decompressed, performance will be the say with both.

          Well then, which one is faster, DNG or uncompressed? I don’t know. Processor speed and storage medium will be the two main variables there. You might see the same overall performance for a machine with an SSD drive but a slower processor compared to a machine with a faster processor and a mechanical hard drive. To test it you could convert say 500 images to JPEG in two batches, one uncompressed RAW and the other DNG. Time both of them and that will give you your answer (for your specific hardware configuration).

          Another example to illustrate the difference… a lossless compressed image file is pretty much the same as taking your uncompressed RAW file and zipping it. When you unzip it, you have a bit for bit identical copy of the original. DNG is the same, it’s just that with the DNG format Adobe is saving you the trouble of having to unzip and import all your uncompressed files. The DNG format also allows the convenience of embedding an image preview.

          So… uncompressed RAW and DNG will identical when compared pixel for pixel. Compressed RAW (specifically speaking of Sony’s version) and uncompressed RAW will have differences in image quality.

          Cost wise, DNG or compressed RAW will represent a dramatic savings if you’re a full time professional generating thousands of files every week. The caveat is that if you’re converting to DNG, you should not delete your original uncompressed RAW files until you’ve edited, and converted your images.

    2. Pingback: Sony a7RII Firmware Update 2.00 Adds Uncompressed Raw

    3. Pingback: Sony a7II FW Update 2.00 adds PDAF + Uncompressed Raw

    4. Everyone is talking about the uncompressed RAW, but my question is about the adapters we A7ii users can now use: if I can’t afford the metabones adapter, what’s the next best thing?

        1. I pretty much base all my purchases on your reviews. I have the original A7 with the two primes the 35mm Zeiss and the 55mm Zeiss. I shoot a lot of portrait and landscape. I don’t care about 4k and don’t need to crop in my shots. So with that being said I bought the A7Rii, and took some shots. I honestly couldn’t tell much of a difference between the two. CS6 and Lightroom can not read the raw files from the A7Rii. I even updated Lightroom 6 and updated and still no raw. Anyways I am just thinking I am going to stick with the lighter smaller A7. I don’t need 4K, 5 Axis, or 42mp. Cheers

    5. Just got the Sony a7RII and want to learn the different features, etc. Thank you for your information. I’ve read different ways to download the firmware update for RAW. One suggested saving to a formatted card and inserting that in the camera and another suggests plugging the camera into the computer. What do you think is the best way to download and install the update? Thanks.

    6. Hi,
      I was trying to find more information on the uncompressed RAW files of Sony cameras, as I come to a different conclusion when calculating the file size of my images.
      I have a Sony a7II, which shoots 24 MP. With 14 bit colour depth and three channels of colour, each pixel should require 42 bit of memory when saving. For the whole image that is 1008 Mbit or 126 Mbyte. The uncompressed RAW files however only have 42 Mbyte.
      Hence there must still be a considerable amount of compression, or am I getting something wrong here?

    7. Hi,

      I noticed that after upgrade to FW version 3.0.3, my uncompressed raw file size became around 35MB size, much smaller than around 80MB, and even smaller than compressed, is it a bug?

    8. Hello Brian. When I import my A7RII images into Lightroom I can see the “flat” image, then within seconds Lightroom applies what looks like some sort of preset correction to the images. Is there a way to import the images without Lightroom applying this correction? The images were taken uncompressed with the Sony PP7 profile. Thank you in advance for your help!

      1. Picture Profiles are only compatible with JPEG – not RAW.

        The in-camera preview is actually a small JPEG.

        When you import RAWs into Lightroom or Photoshop it rebuilds the preview to show what the RAW really looks like.

        If you want to apply PP7 profile you can only do it to JPEG – not RAW.

    9. Hi Brian, what is your workflow when it comes to converting to DNG. After taking the photos as uncompressed RAW, do you first convert them to DNG with the converter and then edit them or do you first do all the editing on the RAW’s and after convert the DNG’s and deleting the original RAW’s to save space?

      I’d like to know the order.

      thank you in advance.

      1. I don’t. There’s no visible difference between DNG and Compressed RAW. In fact it’s very hard to see any difference between Compressed and Uncompressed RAW. So if there is a reason I want the full RAW, I never make it smaller.

    10. I see, so basically I should shoot in compressed if there’s no visible difference and have half of the file size, I wonder why doesn’t everyone just do that then? I guess some are afraid that in some specific situations there is visible difference?

      1. Most people do. There was a huge outcry for Uncompressed Raw but they nice it was released, people realized Compressed Raw was just as good. The only time I’d shoot Uncompressed is if I was shooting really long time exposures. You end up shooting so few frames that the extra file size is no big deal.

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