More enlargement ratio means smaller CoC for the same blur circle
in the final print and that means less DOF.
You heard right. You get less DOF with smaller sensors. It's a
linear relationship.
The reason the prevailing wisdom is the opposite of that is the
basic assumption used - constant framing. For constant framing,
you need to use a shorter focal length on the smaller sensors.
Indeed, constant framing is the key.
Shorter focal lengths have more DOF and the relationship is (kind
of) quadratic. That means it cancels out the linear of the
sensor-size term and reverses the effect so that, with constant
framing, you get more DOF with smaller sensors, and the effect is
(roughly) linear.
The "kind of" and "roughly" above are because the effect is only as
described for subject distance
not true, then the effect is non-linear.
--
Lee Jay
(see profile for equipment)
My crude comparison with "almost" constant framing between a 5D at
155 mm and a 30D at 100 mm from the same shooting location
(constant framing and constant perspective) and same f/2.8 aperture:
--
Tom