boBQuincy
<font color=green>I am not carrying three pods<br>
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2002
- Messages
- 5,083
I have noticed some confusion with regards to what the crop factor does to a lens, and have a new approach on how to relate to crop factors, one that may be more intuitive than what we often read.
With a wide angle lens the primary concern is field of view. Here it is convenient to redefine the focal length in 35mm/fullframe terms since that is a good way to imply what the field of view would be. If we mount a 24mm lens on a 1.6x camera we can expect it will give approximately the field of view of a 38mm. If we are looking for a really wide angle we know we will have to spring for something under 18mm.
Where this equivalency doesn't work as well is at the long end. Here field of view is not much of an issue, it is already small and 1.6x less may not be important. In many cases the lens is not as long as we would like anyway and our subject only covers a small area of the viewfinder, cropped or not. What can really be considered misinformation is equating a 200mm to a 320mm. The 200 on a crop camera only gives the field of view of a 320, but with a long lens what is really important is the magnifcation, and the crop factor does not change the magnification at all. An image of the moon projected on the sensor will be the same size with a given lens, no matter what camera it is mounted on.
So the first point is: the *only* thing that changes when moving a lens from a full frame camera to a crop camera is the field of view. The second point is that field of view is often not the most important issue when using a long lens. Magnification is generally the main reason for using a long lens and magnfication does not change with a crop camera.
To reduce confusion I prefer to consider lenses as whatever the focal length actually is, and just realize that 24mm is not very wide on a 1.6x camera.
Right or wrong, I expect to hear more about this, and that's what makes this board so good!
With a wide angle lens the primary concern is field of view. Here it is convenient to redefine the focal length in 35mm/fullframe terms since that is a good way to imply what the field of view would be. If we mount a 24mm lens on a 1.6x camera we can expect it will give approximately the field of view of a 38mm. If we are looking for a really wide angle we know we will have to spring for something under 18mm.
Where this equivalency doesn't work as well is at the long end. Here field of view is not much of an issue, it is already small and 1.6x less may not be important. In many cases the lens is not as long as we would like anyway and our subject only covers a small area of the viewfinder, cropped or not. What can really be considered misinformation is equating a 200mm to a 320mm. The 200 on a crop camera only gives the field of view of a 320, but with a long lens what is really important is the magnifcation, and the crop factor does not change the magnification at all. An image of the moon projected on the sensor will be the same size with a given lens, no matter what camera it is mounted on.
So the first point is: the *only* thing that changes when moving a lens from a full frame camera to a crop camera is the field of view. The second point is that field of view is often not the most important issue when using a long lens. Magnification is generally the main reason for using a long lens and magnfication does not change with a crop camera.
To reduce confusion I prefer to consider lenses as whatever the focal length actually is, and just realize that 24mm is not very wide on a 1.6x camera.
Right or wrong, I expect to hear more about this, and that's what makes this board so good!
