Yea, your examples have been great ... for instance, LOL that you too are "Pigpen from Peanuts with a dust cloud" behind 'ya! ;-)
Plus your stuff and others are much more representative of typical use cases versus my "scene" shots.
And LOL I obsess over the Pixel-Peeping! ;-)
I wasn't clear that what I meant by IR compensation is adjusting the strength of the light itself. I.e. if something in the foreground becomes over-exposed, rather than dropping the overall exposure (which effects everything), the camera could maintain the exposure (so you have some detail in the dark/far-away areas from ambient light) but reduce the power of the light. That's not an option with an external IR unless you hook it up somehow.
With an external IR, when something moves into the foreground, the camera has to decide (quickly!) if it should leave the exposure as-is ... so everything is good except that foreground is blown out ... or reduce exposure, darkening everything, but providing good detail what showed up close to the camera ... which yea, is probably what you want the vast majority of the time.
i.e. who cares if the background goes dark as long as you get a good face shot of the dirtbag ... or someone driving by in their golf cart! ;-)
Exactly.

