I'm reviving this older thread because I've done some more testing, and I don't understand the impact of low range clipping on PixInsight's SNR calculations. I think this explains the unexpected results I saw above, and again today.
I've been comparing the algorithms to integrate a set of 27 calibrated OIII frames of Abell 72, a faint PN. (I previously corrected hot pixels with CosmeticCorrection, using a master dark created from 90 darks with the same temperature and exposure time of the lights.) I created three stacks of the calibrated lights, one with no pixel rejection, one with WSC rejection, and one with LFC rejection. I found I got the most satisfactory pixel rejection with low/high settings of 4/3 on WSC and 6/6 on LFC.
The process console report of the noise reduction depended greatly on whether Clip Low Range was checked or not. Here are the results:
Clip Low Range Unchecked
No rejection (reference/median noise reduction): 1.4542/1.6200
LFC66: 1.3167/1.4668
WSC43: 1.3091/1.4584
Clip Low Range Checked
No rejection: 1.3205/1.4711
LFC66: 1.3174/1.4676
WSC43: 1.4495/1.6147
With Clip Low Range inactive, the LFC result has more noise reduction. With Clip Low Range active, the WSC version has more. Can anyone help me understand the results? My sense is that I should have Clip Low Range active to eliminate dead pixels, but I don't see why that would change the relative SNR between the WSC and LFC versions.
Kevin